Nicely Done!!! Glad you're happy with it
and painted it - LoL. I really don't think
I was ever gonna get to build/paint it,
so I figured I would let you do it.
I forgot to mention - the kit was either missing the bottom front six teeth or I accidentally threw them out. I had to sculpt them with Alves! I dreaded trying that for so long, but in the end it took about fifteen minutes with an X-Acto knife and a magnifying light. And I must say - I'd make a good dentist!
Awhile ago I got the very rare XO-Facto double kit of Dr. Frankenstein, The Bride, Dr. Praetorius, and the Monster, and Dr. Frankenstein's nose wasn't there. What do you do? There are no replacement pieces. I sculpted that one as well - and you're right, it does help sharpen your modeling skills.
Todd P. wrote:Very neat. I always liked this Kong and it's a pleasure to see him in the Lowbudget museum.
As I'm sure you know, Jeff also sculpted the Bama box-art Kong and also the Pestilence Kong replacement head.
True, but I don't even consider the box-art Kong (actually painted by Kunstler) a real Kong. It just don't look like him - though I'm glad I did that kit!
Tim Casey wrote:...the box-art Kong (actually painted by Kunstler) a real Kong ...
Are you sure about that? I thought the only monster art Kunstler did was the Forgotten Prisoner. I believe that's what Thomas Graham's book says, anyway. It's going to shake my world a little if he also did Kong.
I'm close to 100% certain. I bought a coffeetable book about Bama, and the chapter on Monster Models had pictures of everything he did. It didn't include Kong, Godzilla, or the Prisoner.
(I was going to recommend the book highly, but it looks like it's out of print. I would not pay hundreds of dollars for it!)
I always thought that the Kong and Godzilla boxes didn't look like Bama's style of illustration; I also thought the Kong box looked ridiculous with the six-pack abs. (I still love it, though).