The Duxford (formerly "Mary Alice") thread got me thinking about the progress being made on the Memphis Belle in Dayton. I am an admitted rivet counter, it's true. To me, one of the most important things to finish off a great mechanical restoration is getting the paint right. The details in a Mustang like "Happy Jack's Go Buggy" are, to me, what puts it far over the top; stencils, fonts, paint shades, flat tones, etc. I see no reason why the Belle can't be done as well and set a new standard for re-creation authenticity.
The Duxford discussion on having mannequins appear to contemplate nose art got me thinking about the Belle. Somehow, I knew, but forgot, that Tony Starcer was the Belle's original artist. With something like 130 B-17s to his credit, what a legacy! Anyway, I was simply going to add to an existing thread, but I couldn't find one that truly stayed on topic.
Would ya'll be interested in creating a factual, objective thread simply to point out unique markings or the like as if we were directly contributing to the restoration team?
I'm not a Belle historian, don't claim to be, but I'll start off with a few observations and let the experts take over.
This shot appears to be a color still from the Wyler movie:




So, I notice there's a mod/sensor added where the serial stencil is, what was that?
Did Starcer sign his name adjacent to the art?
I see the prop blade info is stenciled perpendicular to the blade
The OD camo on the cowls swoops down around the whole front of the cowl ring
The Belle's shoe is outlined in a darker color on both sides
Prop hubs are black
What of the darker camo splotches seen on her fuselage?
What markings/names were added after her last mission that don't need to be replicated in the restoration?
How tough will it be to recreate the Belle's nose blister & socket guns?
I'm a novice ... you guys take over.
Ken