-
Posts
442 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Events
Everything posted by Paul Jarman
-
Welcome to MSW, Jonathan. Paul
-
Welcome aboard Chris. Lucky you retiring so soon, I have to wait until November. look forward to seeing a build log. you are already getting good advice and will get a lot more from other members. good luck with your build, will drop by every once in a while to see how you are getting on. Paul
-
Hi Anna, Thanks for your compliment. I will get back to building it once I retire in November. You will be amazed at how soon you can get to the stage that you will be building advanced level kits. In some respect they can be easier than beginner level kits because of the scale you work at. I am building the AL Marina II and that is a good kit as are most of AL's kits. The Mamoli Baltimore Clipper looks good, another kit in my retirement stash. Billings do some very good kits. They just let themselves down with plastic fittings and the instructions need careful reading. At the level you are working there are so many kits to choose from and I am certain you will get some good advice from other members. I know how the oops were does that bit go syndrome works. Usually it's a piece that has been forgotten or needed to be added before certain areas are built. Paul
-
Welcome to MSW Gary, Know how you feel. I still work so am a weekend modeler. I will be lucky enough to retire on November 6th this year. You have come to the right place to share your hobby with others. Once you have started your kit you might consider starting a build log. Looking forward to that if you do. Paul
-
Hello.... I am new here to the forum
Paul Jarman replied to mfrazier's topic in New member Introductions
Welcome to MSW Mark. Paul -
Anna, You say first build log, but is this your first wooden model. If this is your first you are doing a cracking job. Especially building an AL kit. I have this kit in my retirement stash and am currently building the AL Marina II. Brilliant advice on plank bending around jar tops and glass rims. As for the instructions, even with English as a first language AL's instructions can be daunting to follow. They don't tend to be in any real order. But I find that their picture instructions are easy to follow. You have been given some great advice so can't really add a lot other than that you should always think at least ten steps ahead. Keep it natural or paint it is all down to personal choice, I personally prefer to paint my models. Little mistakes here and there are how we learn in this hobby. I make loads of them. Look at my log for the Amerigo Vespucci and an expert will pick out quite a few mistakes, but for me it looks like it should so I just don't concern myself with them. At the end of the day you build for you and the finished model once displayed is a joy to behold especially as you are the one that built it. As for ship terminology, I know a smattering of it but it does not concern me. The hull is the hull a block is a block and a rabbit is something kept in a hutch not a groove down the keel. (LOL) I look forward to following your log. Keep up the excellent job you are doing and above all enjoy, enjoy, enjoy. Paul
-
Looks like a good model. Nice lighting effect. I have this kit in my retirement stash. Paul
- 118 replies
-
- sanson
- artesania latina
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Welcome to MSW Paul
-
Paul
-
New to ship modelling? But what do you build first?
Paul Jarman replied to MSW's topic in Wood ship model kits
Hi all, first off, I am still building, but have recently moved into a new flat. Two months ago, seems like longer. Sorting the move, moving in, decorating and furnishing,sorting bills and utilities. Before you know it four months has gone with no modelling. But that is the beauty of this hobby after a break you soon get back into it. 10 months to retirement so am keeping my main model till then. In the mean time I am building the AL Marina II. Anyway i digress: This is a good thread and some great advice, as always from members of this forum. Good call with Billings, they have some great models let down by instructions and also fittings in plastic, real downside to their kits. My first wooden kit was the Cutty Sark. Cant remember the kit manufacturer. It was not a beginner kit but was a joy to build. It's a good question of where do you start. My own view is that a beginner kit can actually be harder than a mid range or over kit to build. I find that a beginner kit has so many small and cumbersome parts that it becomes frustrating to build. Whereas a mid level kit is a good size and the parts especially the fittings are easier to handle. A good place to start if you have never built a wooden model, and I realise this may sound silly is with the AL Heritage kits. I have the printing press and London telephone box. They are simple to build. but they also have a decent bit of woodwork required to build. IE cutting out, measuring up and adding a few fittings. They also don't require a lot of tools, just the basic modelling tools. If you can't get on with these kits and find you give up and find building in wood a challenge then you have not lost a lot of money. On the other hand when completed you will have some nice models and can then move onto wooden ship modelling with confidence. Another big no-no is not to go out and spend a few hundred pounds on tools, paints and other equipment, especially powered tools only to give up after a few weeks and everything gets skipped out of frustration. The most important thing to remember is that no matter which level model you choose you will be participating in a wonderful hobby that will keep you occupied for years to come and on completion of your first ship, you will always enjoy. When I got back into wooden kit building after a gap of around 30 years I gave up on at least five kits because I found them too small a scale but with perseverance I found the perfect kit for me in the Amerigo Vespucci, and I look forward to carrying on with this build come my retirement. And of course there is this forum where you will always get plenty of good advice and tons of encouragement from its members. Below is my model station finally set up in my new flat. -
Shean Paul
-
It is a good feeling starting to model in wood for the first time. You will find a lot of the tools you use for plastic modelling will work just fine with wood. Most of the extra's you buy would be power tools such as a dremmel. And a headband magnifier will be a huge asset. (If you don't have these already) There are a few plank benders on the market and i have used most of them and don't like any of them. If i need to bend wood i find a good soaking in warm water and bending by hand following the run of the bend or using the handle of one of the larger paint brushes or even bending round a tea cup works just as well as any of the plank benders. Paul
-
Welcome to MSW Ivan, Good luck with your first wooden ship build. you will love it and if you find yourself stuck at any point in the build will get plenty of help from the members of this forum. Paul
-
I try to void CA glue. Don't like using it at all except in an extreme emergency. I only really use it for attaching PE parts. Apart from going brittle over time it also heats up as it cures which has the potential to snap the rigging cord if it is too tight. I find that Very thin plastic cement works best for knots. The Tamiya one with the brush in the lid works best for me. Paul
-
Hello to you Chimera, and welcome aboard. Paul
-
Nice kit great job. Like the water effect. Like the search and rescue vessel as well. I have built the Revell version of the same vessel. Paul
-
Keith Paul
-
This may be of some help. The deck plan is around page 14. https://www.artesanialatina.net/en/elite/485-wooden-model-ship-kit-cutty-sark-tea-clipper.html Open the instructions and you can see the deck was planked. When I built the Cutty Sark I planked the decks, however it was not a Billings kit. Paul
-
Don't know if this is a problem with Mantua kits. But I have the same thing with the brass scrollwork on my kit. It took quite a bit of filing to get the parts to fit. Luckily I don't have a lot of brass decoration for this kit. But as you so rightly point out we pay a lot of money for these top end kits and should not expect these problems. Paul
-
A lathe for masts and spars
Paul Jarman replied to Don Quixote's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
Like that way Bob, I will give it a try. Paul -
A lathe for masts and spars
Paul Jarman replied to Don Quixote's topic in Modeling tools and Workshop Equipment
I will bare that in mind with The Mantua lathe should i want one. Must admit when i did the masts and spars for the cutty Sark many years ago i used sand paper and turned the dowel in my hand and it worked out just fine. If i did need a lathe i would use a drill. Paul
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.