I've made some good progress on the kit.
Here is the bottom plate connected up to the main board so the LED has power.
Then it was on to painting up the outside of the model. I went with a plain gray base, and I used a darker gray on some details here and there. Wherever it appealed to me to do it.
Since I decided that this was a Hoth campaign AT-ST, I added the cool little logo to the side that was on the screen model.
For an example of the logo,
look at the bottom of this page in the Behind the scenes section.
At that point, I put a gloss coat on the parts for the next stage.
This is when I painted up the two pilots.
I made some changes to them as they had really poorly defined arms. I kept the arms for one of them, and just cut them off and repositioned them a little. The other one I cut off his arms and head. Then I replaced the head a little bit turned. The arms were from the WizKids
Star Wars Minis Hologram General Veers. I cut off the gun in the right hand, and now it's a control stick.
I decided on my own color scheme for the pilots, as I figured that the arctic environment may have had a different AT-ST commander uniform color scheme. I wanted something a little different than the green helmet.
The pointing hand works well to either reach for a switch on the console, or he's pointing to the screen.
After the gloss coat had a chance to dry, now it's time for the gunk wash. This is a
term I picked up here for doing a wash using unthinned oil paints. I managed to find
an eBay seller that had MIG 502 Abteilung Starship Filth in stock, so I got two tubes of it (They're out now).
The basic idea is it's like a wash. Smear it on, and wipe it off. It'll get into all the little crevices, and it also tints the paint just a little bit. I really like how it came out. I did an initial wipe down, and then waited a week or so and did another.
The toughest part of it was the fiber optics in the chin guns. I haven't done much with fiber yet, so I'm still learning. I originally wanted to have a flexible tube that leads from the gun to the light box with the LED. This didn't work out like I hoped.
My first idea was to strip a wire, and then use the insulation to go around the fiber. Getting the fiber into the sleeve ended up to not be possible. Then I tried to use some decorative line with the center filling pulled out, and that just frayed out too much.
So, I ended up with using some styrene tubing that I melted with a lighter into a 180degree bend. Then cut it into pieces to give a pipe for the fiber to run through. I used white school glue to affix these parts as I didn't want to risk the fiber being effected by the glue chemicals.
Then I just hand painted these bits by hand.
The lights in the guns work, but they're not great. I may come back to it later on. For now I'm satisfied.
Here's a short vid I made of it. My camera isn't too great at videos, that's why I mainly stick to still images.
https://youtu.be/HJNBt1UfZE8
And that's where we're at. I'm ready to do some final dry brushing and damage effects. Then put a satin coat down and start on the base. I need to now research how to make good looking snow for it.