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painting

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2015 2:03 pm
by dragon123
Hi

I am wanting to paint my tank commander can anyone give advice what colours to use :wave:

Re: painting

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2015 2:54 pm
by billpe
Which country is he from?

Re: painting

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 6:18 pm
by dragon123
lol sorry its a german panther tank commander

Re: painting

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 6:49 pm
by PainlessWolf
Good Morning,
A lot of what colors or uniform pattern to use can be dictated by which Unit's tank he is commanding. Early War, black uniforms, Assault Artillery? Feld Grau, SS?, black or camo ( depending on when in the war ) There are a lot of great books out there and reference sites about German uniforms.. Which ever you go with, have fun!
regards,
Painless

Re: painting

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 7:26 pm
by jackalope
Blond hair and blue eyes. ;) :haha:

Re: painting

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 8:21 pm
by billpe
German tank uniforms were black and I have a feeling they had pink piping.

Re: painting

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 9:39 pm
by Woz
Wiki-

Panzer uniform (Sonderbekleidung der Panzertruppen)
Oberfeldwebel, Panzer troops, 1941

This consisted of black wool hip-length double-breasted jacket and trousers, with skulls [8] on the collar patches instead of Litzen and, officially until 1942, collar piping in Waffenfarbe (usually the rose-pink of the armor branch, but also gold for former cavalry units in the reconnaissance role or black/white twist for combat engineers). The color and Totenköpfe (skulls) were chosen due to their similarity to the uniforms of August von Mackensen's Black Hussars, and also for practical reasons: the black color made oil stains less visible and a short jacket was less likely to get caught in the machinery. The trousers had tapered cuffs with drawstrings and tapes in order to fit into lace-up ankle boots. Although the jacket could be buttoned to the neck in cold weather, ordinarily it was worn open-collar with a field grey or mouse grey shirt and (in theory) a black necktie.

The jacket was manufactured in three different patterns between 1934 and 1945. First pattern jackets had deep lapels with square collars. There was also no provision to close the collar. Second pattern (1936–42) added three buttons to close the collar, reduced the size of the lapels and had a more pointed collar. Note that some second pattern jackets were produced without collar piping (possibly for non-panzer personnel entitled to wear the jacket). The third pattern (1942–45) deleted the collar piping for all personnel but was otherwise similar to second pattern.

Self-propelled anti-tank artillery (Panzerjäger) and assault-gun (Sturmgeschütz) crews were issued similar uniforms in field-grey from 1940.
Panzercommandant wearing a beret

Originally a large black beret was worn over a hardened-felt helmet. This proved cumbersome and unnecessary and on 27 March 1940 a black version of the standard M34/M38 sidecap was authorized; later in the war the M43 field cap in black was worn. Officers frequently wore old-style (altere Art) "crusher" peaked caps.[9]

Vehicle crews in North Africa wore the same olive tropical uniform as the infantry, including collar Litzen; many tankers pinned their skull insignia to their lapels.
Uniform of assault gun crew

In 1943 the Panzertruppe were issued their own reed-green HBT summer field uniform. This resembled the black uniform but had a single, very large pocket on the left breast and another on the front of the left thigh.

A one-piece denim overall, known as a Panzerkombi, was issued to panzer (armoured) crews and mechanics for maintenance work and the like; crews sometimes wore it for general field service although the practice was discouraged. Originally issued in blue-grey, the Waffen-SS later used camouflage-printed examples. It featured zips running down the inside of dump leg which could be used to zip both legs together to make a sleeping bag and remained in service with the postwar German army.

Re: painting

Posted: Wed Apr 15, 2015 5:46 pm
by Robert Davies
Sincerely, take a look on youtube, there's loads of figure painting tutorials on there, with some excellent tips 'n' tricks :)

-Rob