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This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
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Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Mon Mar 09, 2020 6:54 pm

I see that Sweet & Lovely is pending on Platinum and Little Rebel is not.

Little Rebel is one of my all time favorite Mustangs. I am a HUGE fan of the more recent restorations being finished that have natural finish aluminum panels in all different shades of dark and light (Lopes, Sierra Sue, etc.).

Sweet & Lovely is a beauty, but it just doesn't have that same effect on me.

What's everyone's preference?

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Mon Mar 09, 2020 7:37 pm

Having been around 60ish Mustangs, I can say that Sierra Sue II has a completely different feel to her. That is one that puts off a vibe of being a weapon versus a show pony. It feels authentic because it is. I love how they've let the Alcoa stamps gradually wear off. It is like a time capsule that flies fairly often. That's my personal preference.

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Mon Mar 09, 2020 8:14 pm

GRNDP51 wrote:I see that Sweet & Lovely is pending on Platinum and Little Rebel is not.

Little Rebel is one of my all time favorite Mustangs. I am a HUGE fan of the more recent restorations being finished that have natural finish aluminum panels in all different shades of dark and light (Lopes, Sierra Sue, etc.).

Sweet & Lovely is a beauty, but it just doesn't have that same effect on me.

What's everyone's preference?


The sport plane schemes of the 70s...just my opinion.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/foxtrotalp ... 564411/amp

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Mon Mar 09, 2020 11:28 pm

menards wrote:
GRNDP51 wrote:I see that Sweet & Lovely is pending on Platinum and Little Rebel is not.

Little Rebel is one of my all time favorite Mustangs. I am a HUGE fan of the more recent restorations being finished that have natural finish aluminum panels in all different shades of dark and light (Lopes, Sierra Sue, etc.).

Sweet & Lovely is a beauty, but it just doesn't have that same effect on me.

What's everyone's preference?


The sport plane schemes of the 70s...just my opinion.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/foxtrotalp ... 564411/amp


Race fan from birth, civilian and race scheme will always be top for me as well!

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Tue Mar 10, 2020 12:32 am

bomberfan wrote:Having been around 60ish Mustangs, I can say that Sierra Sue II has a completely different feel to her. That is one that puts off a vibe of being a weapon versus a show pony. It feels authentic because it is. I love how they've let the Alcoa stamps gradually wear off. It is like a time capsule that flies fairly often. That's my personal preference.

Sierra Sue II

civilMustang76o.jpg

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Tue Mar 10, 2020 12:35 am

menards wrote:The sport plane schemes of the 70s...just my opinion.
:drink3:

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Tue Mar 10, 2020 9:22 am

that rustang sure looks like the one i remember seeing at Torrance in 1966 when i lived there.

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Tue Mar 10, 2020 4:08 pm

Lately I've been eyeballing Stars and Bars. The clean look lets Mustang speak for itself.
Image

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Tue Mar 10, 2020 5:10 pm

The year that "Little Rebel" was first completed and made its debut at Oshkosh, I was surprised by how little people photographed it and how many seemed to walk right past it - tons of photos of the polished and glossy "Sweet & Lovely", parked next to it, but only a few rare shots of the more authentically-finished "Little Rebel". I was so glad to finally see it in person a year later so I could see it in detail. To me, it is a more special restoration for the attention to authentic detailing that went into it compared to the earlier "Sweet & Lovely" restoration. It was one of the first to be restored with natural mil-finishes on the aluminum skins (no polishing or faux-patina), and hand-painted nose art where you can see the brush strokes.

"Sierra Sue II" is still the one that checks more of my boxes than any other. For the forensic level of accuracy achieved on "SSII", for that specific airframe, and its history/provenance, it is just unbeatable.

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Wed Mar 11, 2020 1:53 pm

Hello all -

Below are some of my photos from Oshkosh 2010 of "Little Rebel"

Enjoy!

2010 Oshkosh Gallery Link:

https://www.vgbimages.com/AirShows/2010 ... shkosh-WI/

Image

Image

Image

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Wed Mar 11, 2020 3:29 pm

Well I, for one, hate these new Mustang restos. Because I'm a modeler. Back in the 1980s, when all the Mustangs looked like they were just big models sprayed with Testors rattle can silver, it was easy to paint a model P-51. Now I have to master 10 different finishing techniques just for the base color.

Long live the silver spray bomb Mustang!

Image

August

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Wed Mar 11, 2020 9:46 pm

I like it when aircraft are painted in authentic markings, and the paint allowed to fade. I know it doesn't win prizes, but the realistic look is what does it for me. But it also shows the work that went into keeping these birds flying. Grease from boots crawling over it, greasy hand prints, areas with the paint touched up here and there, repair patches.

But they aren't mine, and until I win a lottery, it's just my opinion.

Re: Sweet & Lovely vs. Little Rebel

Thu Mar 12, 2020 5:15 pm

JohnTerrell wrote:The year that "Little Rebel" was first completed and made its debut at Oshkosh, I was surprised by how little people photographed it and how many seemed to walk right past it - tons of photos of the polished and glossy "Sweet & Lovely", parked next to it, but only a few rare shots of the more authentically-finished "Little Rebel".


You can polish old skin and make it look pretty shiny, or paint it. To get the "authentic" look though, you may need to replace all the skin. So which do you prefer, real WW2 vintage skins or full skin replacement? Of course some have the skin replaced for that perfect polish job too.
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