Jurassic Park Collectible Thread (JP, TLW:JP, JPIII, JW, JW:FK)

Collector Freaks Forum

Help Support Collector Freaks Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Did you start the Rex repaint?

I did, slow going so far, working on the hand and foot claws first, to my surprise there’s quite a bit to them when you get the right reference.

776A2A41-0719-4610-9C8C-C9226F12481A.jpeg

If you look close, there’s a striping pattern of black and brown under the scuffs and scratches. I have the base brown done, working on the black stripes then the wear and tear.

I’ve also taken a photo of my SC Rex and I’m going in Photoshop mapping out the colors of the skin to use as my paint guide. Between custom paint jobs and movie reference, there are a lot of good shots to figure out the pieces, but none that show you the whole thing so I’m merging the pieces in my image so it’s easier to work from.

For example, I didn’t notice in many shots, but if you look at the image I’ve posted, the dark patten that comes down her thighs is over lighter tones up there, but once it hits the scales running down to the toes, the whole front of the leg is dark with light highlights.

I’m really trying to study all the reference to make it the best possible. Every repaint I’ve seen so far has looked impressive but there’s usually a spot or two I’ll notice aren’t entirely accurate but only if you’re really diving in like me, most people wouldn’t notice, like I can’t think of an Rexy paint up with the toenail striping pattern.
 
I know enough of the Rex's colors from memory, but you never really get clear long static shots of it in JP1. You really miss out on so much detail they put into it.

I've never seen that shot and never realized she had a spotted pattern, at least on the legs. The only thing they always stuck out to me about her was her light colored belly.

The best reference of course is the Winston puppet, not the CGI model.
 
I did, slow going so far, working on the hand and foot claws first, to my surprise there’s quite a bit to them when you get the right reference.

View attachment 407013

If you look close, there’s a striping pattern of black and brown under the scuffs and scratches. I have the base brown done, working on the black stripes then the wear and tear.

I’ve also taken a photo of my SC Rex and I’m going in Photoshop mapping out the colors of the skin to use as my paint guide. Between custom paint jobs and movie reference, there are a lot of good shots to figure out the pieces, but none that show you the whole thing so I’m merging the pieces in my image so it’s easier to work from.

For example, I didn’t notice in many shots, but if you look at the image I’ve posted, the dark patten that comes down her thighs is over lighter tones up there, but once it hits the scales running down to the toes, the whole front of the leg is dark with light highlights.

I’m really trying to study all the reference to make it the best possible. Every repaint I’ve seen so far has looked impressive but there’s usually a spot or two I’ll notice aren’t entirely accurate but only if you’re really diving in like me, most people wouldn’t notice, like I can’t think of an Rexy paint up with the toenail striping pattern.

did you decide to prime the whole thing first? i'm contemplating not even priming, just wiping all the surface of my SC with some paint thinner and going to work with some acrylics...


going to use some of these type stills as my guide:
maxresdefault.jpg
 
I just can't figure out what kind of paints you guys are using on this material. Won't most of them crack and flake off over time? It seems like you'd need some paint with a bit of elastic 'give' that could also bond with the surface. Almost a dye of sorts. I remember reading on Jin Santome's site that a lot of toy manufacturers use paint that 'eats' slightly into the plastic to help with durability. I can't imagine that's non-toxic, though.
 
I know enough of the Rex's colors from memory, but you never really get clear long static shots of it in JP1. You really miss out on so much detail they put into it.

I've never seen that shot and never realized she had a spotted pattern, at least on the legs. The only thing they always stuck out to me about her was her light colored belly.

The best reference of course is the Winston puppet, not the CGI model.

All my reference from the movie is of the puppet, as nice as many CGI shots look to watch, they’re not valuable for details. There is a lot of skin detail just in coloration on Rexy.

did you decide to prime the whole thing first? i'm contemplating not even priming, just wiping all the surface of my SC with some paint thinner and going to work with some acrylics...

I haven’t finalized a plan yet, but not likely. My current plan is to paint all the skin in the mid tone, then layer the darks and lights over it, the way all the cracks in the underbelly will pop more.

This user just posted a tutorial I plan to review for tips, granted they have airbrush but some principals still apply.

https://www.instagram.com/tedbrothers
 
You guys are going to make me end up paying you to repaint mine :lol

I’ll just say now, every collectible I repaint is a trial and errror experiment of love for the subject, and often spans time because of children and other responsibilities and I wouldn’t dare take anyone’s money because I couldn’t guarantee the same result or a timely turnaround, but there are artists out there who seem to paint these dinosaurs often who probably would do commissions.
 
You guys are going to make me end up paying you to repaint mine :lol


we need to get you over that fear of paints!! :wink1:

maq0o.gif



I just can't figure out what kind of paints you guys are using on this material. Won't most of them crack and flake off over time? It seems like you'd need some paint with a bit of elastic 'give' that could also bond with the surface. Almost a dye of sorts. I remember reading on Jin Santome's site that a lot of toy manufacturers use paint that 'eats' slightly into the plastic to help with durability. I can't imagine that's non-toxic, though.

most of this is hard plastic... which you can use basically anything on it w/o worrying too much over primer. the rubbery part of the neck and tail most likely will work better with water based primer vs. the spray stuff typically off the shelf. i say "most likely" as sometimes rubbery soft parts don't react well with the spray based primers and never set up right/dry and stay tacky. hard to tell with this figure as its pliable on those 2 parts, but not super soft so testing would be the best.

since the base is already yellowish orangeish... and i want JP1 colors which are the brownish/yellowish colors i'll be using acrylics over the stock paint after rubbing it all down with some paint thinner to remove any crap and piss off the surface a little to better accept the paint.... the acrylics are forgiving and with this type of paint on this figure to achieve some realistic tones, a bunch of washes with watered down acrylic will be best in my opinion to get it looking good. the beauty is, its fairly easy to undo if you aren't happy. the multiple washes gives a very dynamic and realistic look. work in single colors... after you are happy with a color that you've done and washed on... hit it with some matte acrylic clear coat. let it dry. that seals that layer in and lets you start on the next color and wash process. repeat till you are happy... then clear the whole thing with the desired level of shiny when you are done. pretty simple to do... and this being a big figure is killer to learn on for you guys that wanna try it out. i think you'll be surprised at how easy it is to achieve some really cool looking paint work with a cheap amount of paint ($1.50/ea at michaels) a few cheap paint brushes and sponges. plus its really entertaining to watch it come to life...
 
how come no company ever made this car into a toy? no toy of this exists as far as i know... WTF

what the hell really?

latest
 
Series 1 (Can you believe the first Toy Line lasted 2 years? That's crazy - now it's 3 waves in only 6 months! These Mattel toys are going to get hard to find, I fear.)

Kenner Catalog v.2 Page 07.jpg
 
Series 1 (Can you believe the first Toy Line lasted 2 years? That's crazy - now it's 3 waves in only 6 months! These Mattel toys are going to get hard to find, I fear.)

View attachment 407085

damn... i never knew. I always wanted one of the cars but i never saw any company make them,
I didnt know they made this
 
I had that helicopter even though it had nothing to do with the movie :lol

The Kenner explorer was really nice, I liked that the window on top could open, I'd pop it off the hinge to reenact the scene of the Rex crushing it in on Lex and Tim.
 
I once took part in a contest where you could win a real JP jeep… I don’t know what I was thinking, I don’t even drive.
I won a T-shirt with the original Jurassic Park logo instead. Once I wore it to work and a co-worker asked whether it was a park I had visited. She was not joking.
 
That's hilarious. You should've told her you were the only visitor to make it our alive. :lol

And MaulFan, wasn't that chopper a reused mold from a prior toy line? I'm trying to remember now. I never did have the money to get any of the vehicles at the time - it was either them or more dinos, and you can image who won that internal battle. :wink1: (I did manage pick up the Heavy Duty Stinger XT-37 from the Aliens Line, though. Probably a gift.)
 
I do believe it was recycled, Kenner/Hasbro have been known to do that, might have been from a Batman line or something. I was lucky to have amazing parents that got me everything JP. I remember a JP balloon for my birthday, playing cards, sheets, clothes, I was all about JP.
 
Given the current success Mattel is having, I'm sure a Mattel explorer is coming, they did it in Matchbox already.
 
I’ll just say now, every collectible I repaint is a trial and errror experiment of love for the subject, and often spans time because of children and other responsibilities and I wouldn’t dare take anyone’s money because I couldn’t guarantee the same result or a timely turnaround, but there are artists out there who seem to paint these dinosaurs often who probably would do commissions.

Oh no pressure or anything. Right now I just want to see what you guys cook up.

we need to get you over that fear of paints!! :wink1:

maq0o.gif





most of this is hard plastic... which you can use basically anything on it w/o worrying too much over primer. the rubbery part of the neck and tail most likely will work better with water based primer vs. the spray stuff typically off the shelf. i say "most likely" as sometimes rubbery soft parts don't react well with the spray based primers and never set up right/dry and stay tacky. hard to tell with this figure as its pliable on those 2 parts, but not super soft so testing would be the best.

since the base is already yellowish orangeish... and i want JP1 colors which are the brownish/yellowish colors i'll be using acrylics over the stock paint after rubbing it all down with some paint thinner to remove any crap and piss off the surface a little to better accept the paint.... the acrylics are forgiving and with this type of paint on this figure to achieve some realistic tones, a bunch of washes with watered down acrylic will be best in my opinion to get it looking good. the beauty is, its fairly easy to undo if you aren't happy. the multiple washes gives a very dynamic and realistic look. work in single colors... after you are happy with a color that you've done and washed on... hit it with some matte acrylic clear coat. let it dry. that seals that layer in and lets you start on the next color and wash process. repeat till you are happy... then clear the whole thing with the desired level of shiny when you are done. pretty simple to do... and this being a big figure is killer to learn on for you guys that wanna try it out. i think you'll be surprised at how easy it is to achieve some really cool looking paint work with a cheap amount of paint ($1.50/ea at michaels) a few cheap paint brushes and sponges. plus its really entertaining to watch it come to life...

I completely stink at painting, I've tried :lol I can't even repaint accessories.

Series 1 (Can you believe the first Toy Line lasted 2 years? That's crazy - now it's 3 waves in only 6 months! These Mattel toys are going to get hard to find, I fear.)

View attachment 407085

I owned that Jungle Explorer... God I'm getting old.
 
Back
Top