Tank recognition flag
Tank recognition flag
Does anybody know where I could find a german one . 1/18 scale ? ,preferably on the net.
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=EKoPLt_coFI see if you can spot me
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It's pretty easy to make your own. Just download an appropriate jpeg or other image, scale to the size you want with any graphic program, even windows paint will work for this purpose. Print it out with any common color inkjet printer, then carefully fold and spindle the paper repeatedly... doing this carefully over and over again will produce a texture that is quite similar to cloth, and the results are quite satisfactory in my opinion. This particular example is one of my earliest attempts, and the red has become somewhat faded over time, but it gives you an idea of what's possible with plain paper and an inkjet printer. Click the thumbnail to enlarge...


Gen. George S. Patton Jr., 28th Regimental Colonel, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, U.S. Army, "Blood and Steel"
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It looks really nice. It doesn't drape as well as I want it to, but crumpling it gave it a really ragged and faded look, which I like. Mine was also on 1:32, so the drape is a lot harder to get.
[img]http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j317/alloyskull101/siggygpxd-1.gif[/img]
Good Traders:
KAMIKAZE
Ruger
Olifant
Panzer M
Good Traders:
KAMIKAZE
Ruger
Olifant
Panzer M
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- Officer - Brigadier General
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Experimenting with different types of paper might produce something that is more akin to real cloth. There is a type of paper called "cotton rag" which has a high cotton fiber content and would probably be ideal for this purpose, but I hear it is hard to come by and expensive because it is favored by counterfeiters..
Anyway, plain printer paper has it's drawbacks... but the price is right, and there is really no limit to the designs you can print out. 


Gen. George S. Patton Jr., 28th Regimental Colonel, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, U.S. Army, "Blood and Steel"