-
Posts
262 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Events
Everything posted by Foremast
-
Thanks friends! I apologize for my absence, but job issues and family matters took me away from MSW (...and from others good things...)! Whom of us has a wife, can understand me: since I got married - about 16 years ago, truely happy years believe me - I postponed a large amount of little works; paintings, repairs, placing of lighting points, ... telling to my wife "soon I'll do it". So, at the beginning of may she gave me the billing: "It's time to do all things, no more excuses!". To do them, first I had to finish all things in progress of my job, then ... 3 weeks of hard work, and my experience as modeller helped me a lot. When I came back to my job, after a so long time, had to recuperate other matters and now - finally - I can open again the main page of MSW. I'm looking for something interesting in my folders, and soon l'll post new images Thanks again for your care, friends!!! Foremast
-
Thanks, Jaro It helped me the website "flickr", where a few years ago I found various pictures of the Hansa ship Lisa von Lübeck. Some of them (and especially one) show a detail of the internal structure. It was compatible with the Bremen's wreck (despite the difference of about one hundred years) and what is shown in an ancient b/w drawing; I don't find that picture any more, but I rememer the theme: a baron or a king in chains who went ashore from a ship that looked like mine. In the centre of the drawing, the noble on the footbridge who was going to be executed ... and on the left a good detail of the crossed beams that supported the aft castle of the ship. All the information matched, so I tried to rebuild the whole structure and the final result is shown in my model. I guarantee, the ship is absolutely strong despite the typical strange shape. I'm glad all this is interesting. Cheers Alex
-
Great job, Ilhan. It's also a great source of inspiration about building techniques and tools for bending. Cheers Alex
-
I like it too. It seems a view of an Iowa-class battleship.
- 1,668 replies
-
- syren
- model shipways
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Thanks, Klaus for your reply! My Berlin (a modified Corel kit) is resting on a shelf, waiting for a finishing that I think never will come. The hull is almost finished and I'd have to start rigging. If I start again with that model, I promise I'll open a log on this site. You're doing a very good model, and carvings are outsanding. I'll follow your log. Cheers Alex
-
Hi Randy! Looking around the logs, I've found this beautiful San Francisco. Excellent model, and guns are amazing. Regars Alex
- 384 replies
-
- san francisco ii
- artesania latina
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
More than the era, I think that's the scale to make the difference. I'm working in 1:50 and if it's a resource (you can work better on details), on the other hand it's also a hard situation: you must work better on those details!!! Anyway, your sails are spectacular. Cheers Alex
- 377 replies
-
- america
- billing boats
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
You're a good taylor, popeye! When I'll do sails, I know to whom I must ask help (and not only for pictures to transfer) Cheers Alex
- 377 replies
-
- america
- billing boats
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Sarah, I didn't know of this kind of shipmodelling before. I'm astonished. Will you coluor the Missury? If you do it ... will you do even its war camouflage paint? Regards Alex
- 52 replies
-
- steelgolem
- missouri
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Why "Modern Impressionist" section? The level of details, in your model, makes me think your pictures would stay better in a "New Realism" folder. Cheers Alex
- 1,668 replies
-
- syren
- model shipways
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Thanks Michael for these deatails. I renew my congratulations Alex
- 2,207 replies
-
Hi, Popeye! There's a false deck under the visible deck, made with a 0,6 mm thick birch plywood. In this way, it had been possible to have - at the same time - a strong deck and thin covering strips that simulate, in scale, the planking. They protrude a bit out of the first beam, so they seem the only planking. Cheers Alex
-
Hi mates, a little step: foredeck. This is a test, the lower part - the fore area of the main deck - still lacks of its supporting elements. I thought that making the deck first, then beams, could help me to collocate upper elements (foremast, bitts) but it hasn't been a good idea. Difficulties have been, instead, more: the easier drilling of deck's holes is nothing in comparision with the difficulty to bend properly the deck. Chees Alex
About us
Modelshipworld - Advancing Ship Modeling through Research
SSL Secured
Your security is important for us so this Website is SSL-Secured
NRG Mailing Address
Nautical Research Guild
237 South Lincoln Street
Westmont IL, 60559-1917
Model Ship World ® and the MSW logo are Registered Trademarks, and belong to the Nautical Research Guild (United States Patent and Trademark Office: No. 6,929,264 & No. 6,929,274, registered Dec. 20, 2022)
Helpful Links
About the NRG
If you enjoy building ship models that are historically accurate as well as beautiful, then The Nautical Research Guild (NRG) is just right for you.
The Guild is a non-profit educational organization whose mission is to “Advance Ship Modeling Through Research”. We provide support to our members in their efforts to raise the quality of their model ships.
The Nautical Research Guild has published our world-renowned quarterly magazine, The Nautical Research Journal, since 1955. The pages of the Journal are full of articles by accomplished ship modelers who show you how they create those exquisite details on their models, and by maritime historians who show you the correct details to build. The Journal is available in both print and digital editions. Go to the NRG web site (www.thenrg.org) to download a complimentary digital copy of the Journal. The NRG also publishes plan sets, books and compilations of back issues of the Journal and the former Ships in Scale and Model Ship Builder magazines.