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About Jake

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So far Jake has created 151 blog entries.

Ode to the Paint Mule

Ode to the paint mule That sacrificial lamb that helps you avoid looking like a fool. You've saved us from stumbling many times And ensured our paint job isn't missing a sign. Over and over, we add layers of paint Learning what's good and what ain't. A quick shot of oven cleaner And we're starting over making our skills even meaner. I have a couple models that never made it past the build stage, as well as a few upper tank hulls that I picked up for free in a hobby shop freebie box. I use these as paint mules ... models I use to test my various paint and color techniques before I airbrush them on a real models. I'm a bit of a perfectionist so I like to make absolutely sure that my technique is tested and dialed in before I spray the real model. I start with a [...]

By |2022-10-30T20:44:03-05:00October 30th, 2022|Random thoughts|0 Comments

Art as a narcissistic act

In 1996, I graduated college and started at a small web development shop (i.con interactive). I was employee #3. Within a few months, I was leading a small team, and within a year, I had a robust team up to 20+ live projects/clients, and was inventing new web design ideas and work processes every day. There were weeks, sometimes months where I was sleeping 4 hours a night in order to get meet deadlines. And I loved it. I left i.con and went to NVision Design. I got more sleep there, but we were blazing new trails and learning new skills literally every day. After 4 years of the start up game, I went to LEGO and established a net new relationship between the company and the adult LEGO fans. My work landed on the cover of Wired Magazine. After LEGO, I started and sold a small 35 person agency. What's [...]

By |2022-10-24T09:15:26-05:00October 24th, 2022|Random thoughts|0 Comments

So you’re getting started with 3D Printing…

Congrats! You've bought your first 3D printer and you're ready to get started. This post is the one I wish I'd have found when I started 3D printing more than a year ago. Let me start this post with a basic sketch of what resin 3D printing is all about. Liquid resin is put into a "vat" The vat sits on top of the "screen" The screen is a UV light source that lights up certain pixels based on the instructions in your CTB file for the model you're printing. You create this file with a "slicer" program. That program basically takes your model (the STL file) and "slices" it into hundreds, if not thousands of layers. The 3D printer looks at the CTB file, grabs layer 1, and lights up the screen pixels to match. The "build plate" is that flat metal surface that moves up and down on your [...]

By |2022-10-24T10:44:46-05:00October 13th, 2022|Random thoughts|0 Comments

Using insulation foam for diorama building

Most of us have seen some remarkable work done with XPS insulation foam. Whether is being used as the base for a diorama or being cut up into individual 1/35 scale bricks, this material is light but strong. You can carve it, cut it, and shape it into some cool shapes. The wargaming crowd has been using XPS foam for years, but we modelers are more recently discovering its wonders. My barn in-progress XPS foam is used for insulating buildings and comes in large sheets. They typically come in 4’x8’ sheets of various thicknesses (1”, 2”, 3”), although stores may sell smaller cut downs too. If you want thicker construction, gluing several pieces together is going to be much less expensive and radically easier for us hobbyists to find than thicker pieces. This material is great because you can shape in so many ways and with so many tools. You can [...]

By |2022-10-24T10:41:11-05:00October 13th, 2022|Random thoughts|0 Comments

Review: German WWII Sentry guard shack (Plus Models)

Sometimes the smallest elements are what really make a diorama scene. New technologies have brought a great many new options to choose from, especially in resin. But I had the pleasure of reviewing a kit that wouldn’t have been possible (or at least affordable) even a few years ago. Plus Models 429 Guard Stand is a kit made entirely of laser-cut wood. This set recreates a German sentry box (aka guard shack). Laser-cut from wood, this is a simple, yet elegant approach to recreating the sentry box. [Read the review on Armorama]

By |2023-09-14T17:01:35-05:00September 14th, 2021|Reviews|0 Comments

German camo pattern photos

This past weekend, I was in Tulsa and stopped by The Hussar, a great local hobby shop. Mike Davidson runs the place and has quite a few pieces of memorabilia… including some Pea Dot and Oak leaf patterned replica hats. Since I’m working on painting a figure in Oak Leaf, I had to snap some photos. I thought they might be interesting to others. 

By |2017-05-08T12:17:48-05:00May 8th, 2017|Research|0 Comments

My local hobby shop (King's Hobby) here in Austin recently had a sidewalk sale. I picked up a box of Tamiya M36 parts, including three top hulls. I'm actually pretty excited about these.... they're going to make great paint hulks to test and practice airbrushing on before they hit the real models. And the best part? They fit perfectly over a can of primer. So using empty primer cans as a holder, I can paint all to live long day. Yeah, it's the little things...

By |2016-10-03T22:54:35-05:00October 3rd, 2016|Modeling thoughts|0 Comments
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