Nice work! Did you mix paints as per the suggestion on the instructions, or go from scratch? And I like the nose nick.
I mixed the paints per the advice of one fantastic builder named Tracy Mann and actually it looks a lot darker in person but from where I'm sitting, perfect in pictures as far as color is concerned. The colors it was supposed to be was 40% Duck Egg Blue, 40% Light Ghost Gray, 5% Medium Blue and 15% white and you can play with your ratios of the final 2 colors to get the desired effect. Well, instead of grabbing a a bottle of Intermediate Blue (couldn't find Medium Blue) I grabbed a bottle of Intermediate Gray (yikes) and had to add a crapload of white to try to correct the problem.
What was really fun was the gridlines as I was losing my mind trying to figure out how to do them. The problem with the kit as opposed to the filming model is that the gridlines on the kit are "outies" (raised) as opposed to the "innies" (recessed) gridlines on the studio model. It was suggested to me that I use an artist's pencil on them and if they were innies that would have been a piece of cake to do(hell I could have used an alcohol wash or powdered weathering if they were innies). So I tried using a pencil and experienced failure right off the bat. So, I took an eraser to the sloppy line and discovered that when you do this you leave a faint hint of the pencil mark and it's realtively straight for the purposes of a weathered gridline.
So all of those gridlines you see are erasures. I think that's pretty neat myself.
-Shawn