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el cid

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  1. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    HM Ships Princess Royal and Tiger at Scapa Flow. V/W Destroyer with Observation Balloon and Drifter full of Libertymen off to sample the delights of Kirkwall 
    w/c 16" X 11" 

  2. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Fleet with Pheasant Scapa Flow WW 2 watercolour 16" X 11"
  3. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Flying operations from a QE class BB at Scapa Flow. Seaplane Carrier Ben my Chree about to secure to a buoy

     
    w/c 16" x 11" 

  4. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Ship Grace Harwar and Steamer Miltiades 
    w/c 16" X 11"

  5. Like
    el cid reacted to Bob Cleek in How much was actually painted?   
    Standing order of the day: "If it moves, lube it. If it doesn't move, paint it!"  
  6. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Sullom Voe

  7. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Shetland Bus
    Norwegian Subchaser escorts a 'Shetland Bus' fishing boat passing Sumburgh Head 
    w/c 16” X 11” 

  8. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Becalmed

  9. Like
    el cid reacted to David Lester in Rope Hanks Conquered!   
    I have always struggled making rope hanks. I've tried every method I can find on this forum and on YouTube, but it always boils down to the same problem. Every method seems to work for me until that point at the end when it calls for "a small dab of glue." Well, for me diluted PVA glue never seems to hold and a small dab of CA glue never seems to hold the whole thing together either. So I end up using enough glue to hold everything together, but the result is usually the glue wicking into the line, darkening and hardening it and it generally looking terrible. The best I have ever been able to do is to try to minimize this effect, which means that at least half of the hanks I make for every model end up in the garbage and I'm only somewhat happy with the ones I do use.
     
    So here is the result of my experimenting yesterday and I think it just might be a good solution to my problem. I was trying (for the umpteenth time) the method outlined by Tom Lauria in his YouTube video. I was having the best luck with this method of any of the others I've tried, but still having the glue problem at the end, so here's how I adapted his method to try to avoid the glue problem.
     
    I wrapped the line five times around three nails - two at the top, with a narrow space between them and one at the bottom. The distance apart is the length I need excluding the loop that goes over the belaying pin; in this case 3/8".
     
    Tom outlines a perfect oval with a series of closely spaced nails, but I found it's not necessary to do that. The hank comes out more or less the same with the three nails as it does with several. Many methods only use two nails anyway, one top and bottom. However I found it necessary to have a space at the top, hence two nails at the top.
     

    Then I wrapped a length of matching sewing thread around the coils at the top and tied a knot. I'm not worrying about the loop for the belaying pin at this point. This knot around the coils ensures that they will not come apart and it's actually easy to get a small dab of CA glue on this knot without touching the main line. The glue only has to hold the knot; the thread is holding the coils.

    When the CA glue was set in a couple of moments, I trimmed the threads off, leaving just the knot.
     
    Then I pulled one of the long ends of the line underneath the coil at the top and up through the centre -
     

    Made a loop out of it and pulled the end back through underneath the coil at the top -

    And then, just like Tom Lauria did, I secured the loop with a drill bit in a previously drilled hole and pulled the loop snug against the drill bit -

    Here I took a length of matching sewing thread in a needle and stuck in down through the middle of the line on one side of the loop and through, at least part of, the coil below -
     

    Then I transferred the needle to the other end of the sewing thread and did the same thing on the other side of the loop -
     

    This ensures that when I tie the two ends together, the knot will be on the back of the hank -

    Then I just tied the sewing thread into a knot on the back side of the hank. Just like before it's easy to put a small dab of CA glue on this knot without touching the main line.
     

    When the CA glue sets, it's just a matter of trimming off all the lines -
     

    This hank cannot come apart because the coils are tied together in a bundle and the loop for the belaying pin is sewn directly to the hank. There's no glue visible on the surface and the sewing thread is completely invisible. I think this is the best hank I've ever made and the process didn't end up with the garbage men wondering  "what's with all the gluey coiled thread coming out of this house?"
     
    So that's my good news for this weekend.
     
    Happy Thanksgiving to the Canadians out there! ( or should I say "Happy Hanksgiving?")
    David
  10. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Centurion 
    C class Empire Flying Boat. 16” X 11”

  11. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Ocean Artist
    Based on several Ocean Class ships  W/c 16” X11”   


  12. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Port Caledonia was a four-masted steel barque built in 1892 by Russell & Co., Greenock 

     
    W/C 16" X 11"

  13. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    HMS Hermes 1982 w/c 16” X 11”
  14. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Lt. Eric 'winkle' Brown in his Martlet approaches HMS Audacity.11.5” X 8.5” watercolour. HMS Black Swan in back ground.

  15. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Down among the Bergs
    Didnt like the Albatross so changed it

  16. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    The iron ship 'Fulwood', 2170 tons, under sail iron ship, 2170 tons, When under Norwegian flag went missing in 1919 on a voyage from Buenos Aires to Korsor

  17. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    More postcards

     

  18. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Abandoned 
    No SOS In thos days 
    w/c 16" X 11" 

  19. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Should have said, It is supposed to be 'Off Gourock' on the river Clyde, an assembly and dispersal point forConvoys.
     

  20. Like
    el cid got a reaction from Canute in USS Oklahoma CIty CLG-5 (1971) 3D CAD model   
    Not to highjack the conversation, but want to also thank you for sharing your CAD images, especially the somewhat obscure weapons, directors, and other antennas. I have the 1/350 Orange Hobby USS BOSTON (CAG-1) in the stash and your research will help me modify the kit to a 1964-66 fit (my dad’s tour as AA gunnery officer and then navigator). So thanks again for sharing all of your hard work.
     
    Cheers,
     
    Keith
  21. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Sorry,I no longer do commissions. This is the only one I’ve ever painted, and it’s part of a Diptych which is in the Russian Arctic Convoy Museum at Loch Ewe 

  22. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Square rigger 'down south' 
    w/c 16" X 11" 

  23. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    Tug just cast off from Steel Barque 'Francois' anonymous coastal schooner in the Clyde estury
    w/c 16" X11"

  24. Like
    el cid reacted to Vegaskip in Ship paintings   
    “Doon the Water” River traffic off Gourock on the Clyde at the turn of 19/20th century watercolour 16" X 11"
  25. Like
    el cid got a reaction from mtaylor in USS Oklahoma CIty CLG-5 (1971) 3D CAD model   
    Not to highjack the conversation, but want to also thank you for sharing your CAD images, especially the somewhat obscure weapons, directors, and other antennas. I have the 1/350 Orange Hobby USS BOSTON (CAG-1) in the stash and your research will help me modify the kit to a 1964-66 fit (my dad’s tour as AA gunnery officer and then navigator). So thanks again for sharing all of your hard work.
     
    Cheers,
     
    Keith
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