Panzer V Panther Final by ranman38
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Description
I will add weathering and zimmerit damage and such as called for by the scene I put it in. I will upload this one of these days as free stuff.
Comments (10)
qizo
Nice work. Now get going on that Tiger!!!! :)
VRG
This is excellent and your modelling is great. It reminds me of building plastic model kits when I was a kid- it's just that now we can do it on the computer.
Karras
Very good of model, but the textures still need more job, dirty, oxides, unpaint , and better mapped. A little job more.
Dann-O
The tracks are awsome. Great modeling.
lorddarthvik
Great work there, the modelling is very clean and correct. I'll wait for your finished scene with the weathered textures :)
JFandL
really just a word for ya! OUTSTANDING work!
cenkkara
very good work!
Klutz
Superb again. Weathered textures as you said, and unit markings. Perhaps a few kill bars on the barrel IIRC? Or was it the Americans that did that? :0/ The rake on the rear looks spot on here.
T.Rex
Excellent. Factory fresh and newly camoflage painted by its crew. Now to get involved in a good scrap (with Photoshop as opponent, of course) for the battlewear! Kill bars on gun barrels were a German custom. A note- an old German tanker once told me all tanks were initially issued panzer grey, later (1942) in sand color from the factory. Tank crews were issued 3 tins of paint powder (green, red-brown, beige-yellow) to be mixed with water. The more water, the lighter the color. The crews did their own camo-painting. Sometimes commanders issued a standard camo-/paint scheme, but often the crews were free to do their own schemes, which helped identify each others vehicles in battle. Numbers (which denoted tank number and unit number) were often hard to see in battle and often wore off, which was why individual paint schemes were favored to keep track of each other in communications, etc..
MikeMartin
When you do upload this model as "Free Stuff" please let me know.....very good model!