>>10270038Is it this one? (Italeri) If not, it doesn't matter, it will serve as an example. So in the pic you'll see the camo is only applied to the upper surfaces and not the wheels or lower hull. This is correct. But it would also be correct if you did paint it on the lower hull and wheels. You can also modify this pattern, you don't need to copy it exactly like you might with a Spitfire that had a specific layout. You can paint this pattern on and then give the vehicle a whitewash to sell that it's in winter, if you wanted. If this view was all you had to go by, you could extrapolate the entire vehicle from it and just try to keep the colour proportions more or less correct. And finally, you could take this reference and apply it to a halftrack, a StuG, a King Tiger, whatever and it would still be correct. So there's a lot of play with it. Should you do multiple vehicles for a diorama, or wargame unit, it's also certainly possible to have vehicles in different patterns mixed together. As the situation dictated, remnants of several units would often be thrown together and put back into action or used as Kampfgruppen and these would usually keep their original schemes (there being insufficient time and resources to bother repainting them).