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rkwz

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Everything posted by rkwz

  1. Always a pleasure reading your log, Patrick (it has been a while). A man of many talents! Love the work on those sails
  2. Hello Kirill, it has been a while. I have been busy with life and work unfortunately so I haven't had the time to work on the model! It will come...
  3. Great discussion guys and loving the extra effort put into the rigging, Bill. You're in good hands with Kirill4 and Patrick guiding you
  4. Superb! My favourite is the 1780 with it's friezes and deck scrubbers. But they're all excellent in any case Happy New Year to you Daniel!
  5. Neat paintwork, you must have buckets of patience and a steady hand Bill! Merry Christmas!
  6. Excellent advice as always, @kirill4. I went ahead and got those 2 books to finish my Xmas shopping although they won't arrive till after haha. I suppose the publishers will be pleased with that and won't be too offended with the pdf link posted earlier? 😉 @bosco72, keep up the good work and remember, build what makes you happy as it's your model... Although I agree with kirill4 that having a crack at learning some new rigging techniques is very rewarding although a further investment in time and effort
  7. Sorry, I meant the spritsail yard which was bent upwards, haha. My Victory rig was pretty basic, no time spent making actual rope so I must have saved a year's worth of effort! Not sure I can get away with the Golden Hind at 1:72 scale though... Just read your amazing spanish galleon build log, kirill4... I will be re-reading it again and again, taking notes. You humble me with your kind comments, but I'm really just a two bit hack at this 😅 Meanwhile at the dockyard... Started test fitting some false decking. Styrene strips cemented below the gunports, realised later the level was too low and added an extra 1.5mm strip above to compensate. Calipers used to mark out where the strips were to be laid... Initially planned to use balsawood, then realised my planks weren't wide enough so I flipped it and recut the deck , hence the incorrect direction of the wood grain. I wonder if it is even visible through the gunports? But it'll always be nagging me in the back of my mind so I'll just have to be patient and source some wider planks and use what I've made today as a template/jig. Also, I've marked out the waterline using a simple jig (helping hands clamped onto a pencil 😅), but holding off the paint job until I have the time to pop into my local to grab some white acrylic paint... Birch wood veneer deck applied with CA and first coat of wipe on poly applied. Hopefully it'll protect it from the inevitable paint and glue splatter later on.
  8. Oh my word. Simply an amazing and inspirational log... There is so much detail, research and patient effort put into this labour of love. Thank you so much for sharing! Keep up the awesome work and hoping to see more updates soon.
  9. Thanks Krill, I agree with you. The plastic molded yardarms look good with the detail already molded in but may not hold up well later due to rigging later. I haven't worked with wood much and honestly am a bit worried I'll mess it up, so will be experimenting with bbq skewers or toothpicks and a mini hand plane, watch this space. Funny you mentioned the bowspirit issues, here is a pic of my Victory build for a laugh showing a severe upward bend because there wasn't a counterbalancing stay, whereas the rest of the spars actually turned out ok provided I adjusted the tension in the rigging carefully on either end. I must find your spanish galleon log for more inspo! Cheers
  10. Thank you, Kirill. I've had fun with this so far, the parts are nicely molded and easy to work with at this scale, I'm sure you will too when you get to kit bashing the Hind. Why don't you post a log too? Still battling on with a false deck for the lower deck cannons and making sure everything aligns nicely before glueing the parts together, not to mention waiting for paint to dry between coats... Lots of learning for this newbie still
  11. Excellent research! I'd love to get my hands on a copy of this too, it looks like a very interesting book.
  12. It's great the kit doesn't have too much excess flashing...looks like a fun kit to work with and I especially like the window and door details. Good luck with your build, looking forward to more progress pics! Cheers
  13. Oh yes, and I forgot to mention a few coats of thinned paint works better... As for the chevron design, I based my paint scheme on this image from a resource shared by Backer ... a concept sketch by Matthew Baker (Fragments of Ancient English shipwrightry) And a supposedly 16th century unattributed painting of the Armada in action vs English ships. It seems spanish ships had chevron patterns pointing towards the stern, while the English, towards the bow. I also felt the Pelican was probably less elaborately decorated compared to the "Queen's ships" and more of an "armed merchantman". Of course the beauty of the Golden Hind is you could always let your imagination run riot and claim artistic license
  14. Hello Kathy, Tamiya tape and a fine quality paint brush (I use GodHand brushes which keep their shape quite well) Also making incisions using a sharp Xacto blade on the hull to mark out the pattern helps, not sure if it'll work for wood (I'm working on plastic) Cheers,
  15. I thought I was looking at the real thing for a moment! I admittedly don't know much about planes, but is that a BMW engine I see? 😄
  16. Excellent masterclass, Jeff! I can't believe it took me this long to discover your work. So much to learn from your techniques...thank you for sharing. I do wonder if styrene cleats will hold properly to the masts with solvent cement especially when belaying rope to the cleats later? I found that drilling a hole into styrene parts and adding some kind of reinforcing material (copper or brass) would provide extra bite into the area it is being glued onto. Cheers, Ron
  17. Excellent research! There is a hypothesis the ship could have been scuttled when the crew arrived home and found the city had been taken by the Mongols. Thank you for sharing the info and educating us.
  18. Thank you Dan, yes I did consider the thinning agents destroying my hard work on the patterned sections! I will definitely take your advice and seal the first few layers of paint before proceeding but I am getting ahead of myself... Still have to mark the waterline, finish off the chevron pattern, decide whether to use acrylic or enamel white for the area below the waterline in keeping with southern hemisphere exploring merchant ships etc. But I am still having fun doing this
  19. Thank you Jeff. I used enamel Matt paints for the detailing, tamiya tape, 2-3 coats and a little patience... although later I heard it isn't a good idea to weather using oil paint on matte surfaces so I may have to just be careful with those patterned sections. Still learning!
  20. A worthy subject and interesting merchant ship from the Southern Song dynasty. I'm looking forward to your progress.
  21. Thank you everyone for your words of encouragement! December is a busy time of year leading to Christmas so I won't be able to get much done like many of you I'm sure... There is still a lot of cleaning of excess sprue and filling holes with putty, but not nearly as much as the Victory thank god. Happily, my deck veneer arrived safely from the Czech Republic (or is it Czechia these days?). I opted for the beech wood version as the Oak grain didn't seem appropriate to me. In hindsight, I could also have painted the deck and saved a few quid... I know this may be premature, but here are some progress pics of the paintwork (before washing and touching up). I've taken Patrick's advice and gone with a chevron design based on the resources he has so kindly shared. Also some assumptions made that Drake was a Man U fan... Cheers, Ron
  22. Hello Heinz, thank you for sharing this inspirational work... It looks superb without any paint and your care in selecting your wood and patiently perfecting each step is obvious. Fantastic craftsmanship
  23. Amazing work and congratulations! She is an absolute stunner Also I am extremely impressed you completed this in just over a year
  24. Those nun buoys sure made me all loopy. Getting close to the finish line... Now to tackle something I've been pondering on and dreading for quite a while. A little test fitting of some pretend hammocks (netting and stanchions to follow). Big thank you to dafi for your suggestion of balsa which is actually quite easy to mould into shape and looks fairly weathered. Stanchions made by bending some staples over a needle nose plier. Staples are pretty tough to cut compared to softer metals like copper! Fingers crossed it all works out later, stay tuned...
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