I don't want to burst your bubble or discourage you from continuing with your hobby...but isn't that just a model plane (fully intact and undamaged) surrounded by beach pebbles. You need to make the plane look like its crash landed, there should be damage, burn marks, the ground should have an impact crater and furrows and I would try and make your own rocks to scale so that it looks more realistic. Sorry if this sounds harsh.
cant tell if you are sarcastic but i think you are. Edit: i can tell that he is. but also, did you expect my first ever diorama to look good? did you expect it to look like a pro made it? did you expect it to show every single tiny detail in 2 blurry images taken from an old broken phone? It does have flaws, but some of the flaws you pointed out were just illusions based on perspective, lighting, photo quality, etc. Instead of discouraging and pretending that you didnt, just because you said "I don't want to burst your bubble", maybe consider giving constructing critisism, and if you cant do that, then shut up
I really would like to hear the story about how a plane crashlanded vertically and got burried under italian pebbles.
If a plane crashes depending on the soil, it's nose/rump can be burried. If crashing on rocks it should be more destroyed and not very likely burried/surrounded by bolders . You can find many plane crash pictures online.
"A **diorama** is a replica of a scene, typically a three-dimensional model either full-sized or miniature. Sometimes it is enclosed in a glass showcase for a museum. Dioramas are often built by hobbyists as part of related hobbies such as [military vehicle modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_military_vehicle), [miniature figure modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_figure), or [aircraft modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_airplane).\[[*citation needed*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed) \] " the defenition of diorama, on wikipedia. it does not need many "ingredients" for it to be a diorama. and you cant expect much realism from the first diorama made by a kid with a very limited set of tools at his disposal
I don't want to burst your bubble or discourage you from continuing with your hobby...but isn't that just a model plane (fully intact and undamaged) surrounded by beach pebbles. You need to make the plane look like its crash landed, there should be damage, burn marks, the ground should have an impact crater and furrows and I would try and make your own rocks to scale so that it looks more realistic. Sorry if this sounds harsh.
there is burn marks and stuff, its meant to be old, like it crashed for a very long time ago
Now you've told me there is "burn marks and stuff", and "it's meant to be old", then it's totally realistic then, good job.
cant tell if you are sarcastic but i think you are. Edit: i can tell that he is. but also, did you expect my first ever diorama to look good? did you expect it to look like a pro made it? did you expect it to show every single tiny detail in 2 blurry images taken from an old broken phone? It does have flaws, but some of the flaws you pointed out were just illusions based on perspective, lighting, photo quality, etc. Instead of discouraging and pretending that you didnt, just because you said "I don't want to burst your bubble", maybe consider giving constructing critisism, and if you cant do that, then shut up
look off, i think you should make some angles to better demonstrate the impact
I agree, it was a poor choice of angle for the pictures
Is the nationality of the rocks important for this?
no
I really would like to hear the story about how a plane crashlanded vertically and got burried under italian pebbles. If a plane crashes depending on the soil, it's nose/rump can be burried. If crashing on rocks it should be more destroyed and not very likely burried/surrounded by bolders . You can find many plane crash pictures online.
it was meant to be like the pilot was crash landing but i do agree that its not very realistic
Not a diorama at all. Would fit in crafts....no offense. For a diorama you need more "ingredients" and a pinch realism.
"A **diorama** is a replica of a scene, typically a three-dimensional model either full-sized or miniature. Sometimes it is enclosed in a glass showcase for a museum. Dioramas are often built by hobbyists as part of related hobbies such as [military vehicle modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_military_vehicle), [miniature figure modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_figure), or [aircraft modeling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_airplane).\[[*citation needed*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed) \] " the defenition of diorama, on wikipedia. it does not need many "ingredients" for it to be a diorama. and you cant expect much realism from the first diorama made by a kid with a very limited set of tools at his disposal