[WWI] bits of new brain ooze
Douglas Anderson
djandersonza at yahoo.com
Wed Jun 3 07:57:26 EDT 2009
Here is a a link to a pic as well
http://www.equality.ws/view.php?img=50498_62.jpg.html
--- On Tue, 6/2/09, Robert Karr <karrart at karrart.com> wrote:
From: Robert Karr <karrart at karrart.com>
Subject: Re: [WWI] bits of new brain ooze
To: "World War I Modeling Mailing List" <wwi at wwi-models.org>
Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2009, 11:42 PM
<<
> But later in the aternoon we DID get to see the new SPAD XIII that Roger
> Freeman built in Texas for Javier.
Did he flew in it?>>
No. It's still awaiting final engine tweeking sitting in the hangar up there
in "Magic Land".
<< no pics- you guys get the SPAD shot.
http://www.karrart.com/aviationartblog/
" It’s strange aluminized paint pulls the same optical tricks similar paint
did in 1918."
This is intriguing. Elaborate, please!>>
There's a sort of cloudy fish scale shift that causes the color to look
hazy from certain angles, but if you look directly down on it, the actual
color is pretty strong. The repro's surface stubstances were made to be as
close as possible to the real deal. The aluminized stuff on the fabric was
visibly different than the non-aluminized stuff on the metal work. The
actual color pigments were the same, only the presence or not of the
aluminum made the difference. And then there's the phenomenon that Alan
Toelle calls "flop" that's difficult to describe, but seems to be an effect
that causes certain parts of an object to catch more light than other parts
that may be more directly lit.Weird.
RK
yeah yeah.......
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