The first glimpse of "Dead parrot" (picture sucks, I'll try to get some better ones):
The weathering was fun. First, I tried the tea-bag trick from the weathering post on the How-To section. It didn't work for me, it didn't do anything. Then I went to plan B: I lit a candle and ran it across all the tubes, letting the tip of the flame lick the tubes, depositing a lovely black shadow. I rubbed the shadow to smooth it out a bit. I used some steel wool to mess up the black deposit, and "erase" places with too much black.
TIPS (don't ask how I found out
)
-Don't wear your nice wool shirt, you will get candle wax on it.
-Make sure you have removed ALL invisible sticky residue from inadequate masking tape. The candle smoke will adere to the sticky residue making a mess and causing you to wipe everything with WD40 and start all over again.
Then I got out some coarse sandpaper and gently rubbed the paint job with it, in random places. Then I rubbed it agressively on the edges and other places of wear and tear. Also, I got a pencil and drew thick lines along the welds and other spots. I faded the lines with my thumb and got a cool looking dark deposit along the welds and other low spots that adds some nice depth. I also drew some blobs in random spots on the tubes and faded them into big light smudges. The pencil was also handy whenever the yellow paint started showing through.
I also thought of rubbing some silver paint along edges and spots of wear and tear, to simulate rubbed paint revealing bare metal, but I got lazy and skipped it. I did sand the edges and rivits of my fake vents, though, to show off some shiny aluminum. Some flat clear coat and it's done! Easy, simple, fun, and great results [/tooting his own horn]. I highly recomend that you try it.
Hugo