If you enter Ju 87 Picchiatelli into Google, you get a large number of references to model building and colour schemes.
Ju 87 Picchiatelli - Google Search
For interest's sake, here's some info on the Picchiatelli that I wrote for an airshow brochure once:
"The Crazy Divers – Italian Ju-87s
With Benito Mussolini's ill prepared entry into World War Two on 10 June 1940 he was well aware of the dominance the Royal Navy wielded in what he referred to as Mare Nostrum or 'Our Sea', the Mediterranean. Due to the successes of the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bomber during Nazi Germany's conquests of Poland, Western Europe and Scandinavia, he saw that this type of machine would be ideal for sinking the British ships. He was right; the Ju 87 Stuka, with its 60º dive angle was to wreak havoc among Allied shipping in the Mediterranean, particularly during Germany's invasion of Crete, where the Royal Navy suffered severe losses at the hands of the Luftwaffe dive bomber squadrons in evacuating Allied personnel defending the island.
By mid 1940 however, the Regia Aeronautica Italiana (RAI) was equipped with the woeful Savoia-Marchetti S.M.85 twin engined dive bomber. Nicknamed the Flying Banana because of its unusual bent profile, the S.M.85 was primarily constructed of wood and was a failure in its intended role. As a result, not for the first time and certainly not for the last, Mussolini turned to his erstwhile ally Adolf Hitler asking for help, in the form of Stukas to equip Italian flying units. In mid June 1940 15 Italian pilots that had previously flown the S.M.85 were sent to the Stukaschule (Dive Bomber School) at Graz-Thalerhof in Austria, for familiarisation training on the big cranked wing aeroplane they soon came to nickname the Picchiatelli.
In the Italian dictionary, the word picchiatello means 'slightly crazy', with a possible second meaning derived from the word picchiata, normally meaning 'a good thrashing', but in aeronautical terms meaning 'to dive', which in the context of the Stuka ties the two definitions together nicely; Picchiatelli; the Crazy Divers!
Initially the Italians received ex-Luftwaffe Ju 87s with their German markings overpainted with Italian ones, but their numbers were supplemented by aircraft fresh off the production lines. At any given time however, the Picchiatelli never numbered more than around fifteen available aircraft, which was somewhat in contrast to the Luftwaffe, which counted on large numbers of aircraft during attacks, where the dive bombers would swoop in from different directions simultaneously to swamp any defences.
As a result, Capitano Guiseppe Cenni of 97° Gruppo attacked enemy shipping by means of a shallow dive to very low level, then released his bomb near the water, whereupon it would skip across the water's surface and strike the enemy vessel. This method proved successful during the Greek campaign; a freighter and gun boat being sunk by this method. The Greeks initially suspected the Stuka had sunk the freighter Susanna with a torpedo.
Despite their small numbers, the Picchiatelli fought alongside the Luftwaffe with eagerness during attacks on Malta and subsequently during Italy's invasion of Albania and Greece. Of their Italian stablemates, the German airmen were complementary about their enthusiasm and courage; the Italians pleased with their new mounts after the poor showing of the indigenous S.M.85.
Ultimately the Picchiatelli never served in large enough numbers to be really effective as a fighting unit on their own, operating almost entirely in conjunction with the Luftwaffe's Stukageschwader (Dive Bomber Squadrons). Perhaps surprisingly, the biggest killer of the Picchiatelli was not fighter opposition, but anti-aircraft guns, which accounted for the majority of losses suffered within the two Gruppi that operated them. By 1943 attrition had taken its toll on the Picchiatelli units and although Ju 87Ds continued to be operated by Italian forces, the original Picchiatelli Gruppi were not subsequently re-equipped."
Here are a few pictures of a full size mock-up of a Ju 87; for a year or two it was depicted as a Picchiatello;