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felelo

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Posts posted by felelo

  1. Thank you guys! Little Update here

     

    I started working on the hull, for now I did mostly the lower section, leaving the aftercastle for later because I still haven't decided on the colors, not shure if I'll follow Revell's scheme.

     

    I used the same technic, black base, brown, scraping and then I painted some individual planks. I scraped the details of the gunports to bring up the texture of it, proceeding to paint the hings black. Looks very nice for me! 

     

    dpgwYXOiPjQR931A86b7Jq8Ci_xEQWNUgYG9vKbw

     

    fYgrBBtDAcjk1npd6H3QPh7A7RWeR3r9On7UG_lF

     

    I've experimente with a thin pen to represent nails, but I don't know if I'll used it.

     

    eR9qwYQes7ojurqEnHC9xqzsPQUJb2RDv-qTdNoa

     

    Painted the forecastle walls and proceded to glue them to the deck(the deck assemply is not glued to the hulls yet, just dry-fitted)

     

    lRPyMH_uTOizqCLnTrgFTWKPqHX6_Feh_nbiUO59

     

    7867cAgg1mUrQAaUh58SWwcpzjoXyHz7cAjp9Y8d

     

    orYxdal3tLZ6ubQd8y1-FHcAcyPGAFTYzUm5t25-

     

    I'm very happy with the looks of the model for now... I'm worried about gluing the hole deck, uppers decks and hull... After some tests I've notice the parts have various gaps and are not very precise, it will demand attention, planning and patience from me. The painting looks so nice I'm afraid to make assembling mistakes and take the magic away hahaha...

     

    And again, this technic for the planking feels like magic!

  2. Hello everyone, I'm Felipe from Brazil, and I'll be sharing here my work on the Revell 1:83 Mayflower!

     

    Around two years ago I've started a topic here on a Pinta Caravel kit I was building, that project stalled because I've moved to college, were I don't have space nor time to work with wooden models, so I decided to sail to the waters o plastic kits. After a lot of research I've decided to buy the Revell Mayflower, great kit, beautiful ship and nice scale. Before starting it I built the 1:200 Academy New Bedford Whaler, just to feel more comfortable with the material, although I've built some plastic models before, they were never ships.

     

    I started the kit by paiting the decks, my intention was to use AndyMech's technic, it worked and it is amazing, slow but easy. I ended up with an weatered effect, the decks look old very used, I don't now how accurate that is for the original Mayflower, but I am very satisfied with the result!

     

    For those who don't know the procedure I'll quote AndyMech:

     

    "Next up was the gun deck painting.  I was going for a wood deck look without actually planking the deck.

     

    Overall, I remember the steps as:

     

    - Deck were spray painted black (seen previously)

    - I applied a base coat of "wood" color

    - Using the back of a #11 knife, I scored each plank line

    - I mixed a little darker and lighter "wood" color paint by adding a few drops of black and white, then individually painted each plank a random color.  

    - Probably had to re-score the plank lines again.

    - Final step was to apply either a wash or drybrush black onto the deck for some detail and depth.

     

    I tried both wash and dry brush and was happier with the dry brush effect."

    First test:

     

    uIEPIRyr0hvtuOZauJBb9eBqHkkVyge30iCFDBsi

     

    Painted the pieces with a layer of black, using a nylon brush:

     

    bwUUMAIyJhq9cv1fDmI4tbRlHf_dQBxjm3x3TiaW

     

    Proceded to paint the decks with a light brown color, and started to score the lines:

     

    Tc88LUKNKiwKV9Rp0sNUvUpOp8_iHy7LdQuJOpeW

     

    CfZYkRya-Ck-wYAxXnRGml6unn1jeaiclaPRTMcT

     

    This technic needs practice, the amount of black paint needes to be right, too little and while scoring you will end up taking out all paint and leaving plastic to be seen, too much and you loose all detail of wood grain. The brown layer also needs attention, I made it thin because I feared more paint wood hide the wood grain, that left me with a dirtier look, of old used wood in bad condition. If the intention is for a brand new look I believe that many layers of very thin paint would be best!

    Also the scoring and scratching: I did it in many diferent ways, almost randomly after noticing that trying to be very precise scoring each plank is not very helpfull.

     

    Thats all for today, following are some pics of the hull dry-fitted just for fun(and a little friend):

     

    vPrg4hWkvKgNl187HScCgJPqPfHa5ifcceaL5ajI

     

    QjeniCn6hOnKVNDhewj3Bif8m_NqgMdP2OzVYnpg

     

    gnSsSHb8-bQzk6JbwqTOAcJCqBR2OcLBBym8x_nX

     

    WzO49Ze85bVuq1SqomhM9BW5Io6kYaDzHCjjpPX_

  3.    Hello everyone, something that always gets me, is that I'd like to know more about ships from the 17th Century

    other than big galleons. I think that the famous galleons make it hard to research on other classes of ships, 

    so I seek for a more extensive knowledge on the ships for that century, maybe a book or something! Any tips?

  4. Hello!

     

     I'm thinking about making an adaptation to the kit, basically, the gat between the poop deck and the main deck

    is to narrow for a man to fit in properly having only one meter in this scale(as seen below in this picture from the instruction

    manual), so it would make more sense that the poop deck elevation would serve as a way to give more room inside the

    poop of the ship!

     

    755_detail.jpg

     

    My solution for that would be this wall:

     

    imagejpg3_zps5489eafd.jpg

     

    I'm not shure yet because this concept would be in conflict with the rudder controller position, 

    I dont have much knowledge under ships of this period, so be free to advise me on that!  :D

     

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     

    The Planking:

     

    I started working on the planking of the hull using nails, as the manuel suggests. But the planks kept spliting

    so I went for superglue. I've been molding the planks under heat before application, otherwise its almost impossible

    to get them right without cracking!

     

    imagejpg7_zps01870585.jpg

     

    I've used cord were the clamps weren't effective, they work just nice!

     

    imagejpg8_zps7ed03713.jpg

     

    imagejpg1_zps5e91a8d8.jpg

     

    Seeing how the different woods come together!

     

    imagejpg2_zps99a2912a.jpg

     

     

    Thanks!

  5. I'm not shure if this is the right place for this question, but if think it is!

     

    Hello everyone! I'm working on a Small Model, and I've been think about making a small scene with it when its done, basically its just the ship sailing in some stormy seas!

     

    I've came around with this picture of a stand for a Plastic Model, and I loved the water affect, but I couldn't find any techniques that would lead to this level of realism, do any of you guys know how its made?

     

    032.JPG

  6.    Hello everyone! I'm Felipe, from Brazil, and this is my first log here, and also my first wooden model! It is "La Pinta", one of the three ships assigned to Columbus expedition, made by a small brazilian manufacturer that suits our needs for good quality kits, as its really hard to find kits from famous brands here.

     

       I've bought it an year ago when I signed up for this forum, but college wouldn't give the spare time needed for this kit, so I've just been able to star working on it this month.

     

     

       The hull structure:

     

    imagejpg1_zpse4f71266.jpg

     

     

       Starting to work on the decks:

     

    imagejpg2_zpsc3e63cd8.jpg

     

    imagejpg4_zps6ff93ae6.jpg

     

    imagejpg3_zps08deb014.jpg

     

    imagejpg5_zps16155a24.jpg

     

     

       And to close the day, an encouraging dry-fit! 

     

    imagejpg7_zps8b0c95e7.jpg

     

     

       Well, its not much for know, but at least I've started working on this beauty!

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