diorama


Stalingrad 1942 diorama


Stalingrad 1942, originally uploaded by sspz101.

Check out the pictures from an incredibly detailed diorama depicting combat during the siege of Stalingrad.


Mark Powell's creepy dioramas


HPNX0071, originally uploaded by Mark Powell.

Mark Powell makes mini visions of hell. I’d like to work my way towards building fanatsy dioramas like this one day. Click on the picture and then explore his Flickr gallery.


Mark Powell’s creepy dioramas


HPNX0071, originally uploaded by Mark Powell.

Mark Powell makes mini visions of hell. I’d like to work my way towards building fanatsy dioramas like this one day. Click on the picture and then explore his Flickr gallery.


Soyuz on the train

io9 has pictures of a Soyuz rocket being hauled across the desert to its launch site by a diesel train. It might be hard to scale match a model of the rocket (or even find one, I couldn’t get a match for “Soyuz” at Hannants) and a Russian train, but think of the diorama possibilities.

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A tank from a lake

Tanks from the Second World War are still being pulled out of the lakes around St. Petersburg. If I remember my history correctly, the city was resupplied across the frozen lakes during the winter phases of the siege and at times the ice broke. The site refers to it as a “BT” tank. You can get BT5 or BT7 tanks in 1:35th scale from Zvezda, or BT5, BT7 or BT2 from Unimodel in 1:72nd. A salvage operation like this would make for an interesting diorama.

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CODE Guardian

CeeGee Studios created an awesome compueter animated short about Nazi super robots (YouTube part 1, Part 2). It got me dreaming up possible propellerpunk (that’s my name for it, which I coined for a story called Heavensent, others call it Dieselpunk) battle scene dioramas.

Take the sort of robots and sci-fi subjects available through Hobbylink Japan, kitbash them with second world war era tank and plane parts then set them against some period tanks or ships. To give an idea of the size of the robot you’d really need to do it in a scale such as 1:144, or even smaller. Revell does a 1:200 oil rig, the destruction of which would be an opening scene from the giant robot movie. Mirage does a Polish harbour diorama in 1:400 or the Clyde, circa 1940 in the same scale. In larger scales 1:144 is well supplied. Here’s Hannants’ list, and that of interesting looking Japanese garage kit company Kami de Koro Koro.

I’m going to be on the lookout for giant robot kits now.

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