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Farbror Fartyg

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Posts posted by Farbror Fartyg

  1. 12 hours ago, popeye the sailor said:

     I'm in awe at how this little model has evolved.  so happy to see your workmanship again :) 

     

    .....you'll have to show us a snap of the shed ;) 

    Thank you!

    I thought you might drop by sooner or later! 

    Perfect timing too.

    The pressure's been dropping a bit in the boiler recently, I have to admit, but your post brought the steam right up! 

     

    More carvings under the knife.

     

    Many many thanks to those who drop by and like/comment! Seriously appreciated! 

     

    Sam

  2. We're currently experiencing an almost riotous bout of shed constructing over here, but I've managed to sneak in a bit of work on Tulpijn too.

     

    New windows, made from a plastic medicine blister pack ( ... just hay fever, before anyone puts on the worrying-pants).

    The plastic had a nice crisscross pattern, so I just removed the foil from and cut to size.

    2017window_aft5.jpg.8523a5a579c897a37627d90577349bb7.jpg

    2017window_aft1.jpg.0595ca814fc31e996386ea17badd5ec3.jpg

    2017window_aft2.jpg.049d16dba9a75c6c1adc16b7de4d0e9e.jpg

    2017window_aft4.jpg.c226b49e2ce048a8a8094d88388ca4a7.jpg

    The work on the beakhead is also progressing:

    2017beakhead1.jpg.71c8ee0d9845567deebe9061279c80eb.jpg

     

    If the shed doesn't claim my life, I'll be back with more rustic folk art in a bit.

     

    Ta-ta

     

    Sam

  3. 17 hours ago, popeye the sailor said:

    it was like turning the crank on the jack 'n the box Carl.....bound to pop out sooner or later ;)   so good to see your progress Sam.   I have to ask.........why did you paint these decks a different color?

        the little boats look quite at home on deck........they look good :) 

     Nice to have you along for the ride, as always!

     

    The deck; well, 's 'spposed ta be that colour, innit ...

    That ijn linoleum.

     

    I'm sure it's off by about 1.59875 miles, but it looked alright when I compared it to painting tips and photos ... and ... I had me a pot of that brown in the paint box so ... 

  4. After a particularly long and nasty trek through the bleak and arid land where no ships are modelled, I'm back with a bit more Akagi.

    (If you added up all the Dutch 17th-century shipping I've eyeballed during my absence, the English would be outnumbered about 200 to 1, but just looking doesn't count, now does it.)

     

    Not much, but I've painted and attached a boat or three.

    akagi_boats.thumb.jpg.80c036cddcf07b2c7f31d273b310fd45.jpg

  5. As long as you feel you've won, when finished ... that's what matters

    Yep.

    That summarises what it's all about.

     

    BUT!

    Keep the info coming!

    One of the great benefits of build-logging your build is all the input you get.

    Hinoki or teak ... It may not really matter in the end but it's jolly interesting. 

  6. Yerr and aye.

     

    Repainting is on the menu ... or maybe it isn't? 

    Aargh the suspense ....

     

    Those of you who read the inaugural post of this thread will know that the Akagi isn't the end. 

    Looking over the instructions for the kit, it looks like we haven't got all that far to go and I'm already thinking about what to build next.

     

    At the moment the Fusô is number one on the list, and she had wooden bits too. 

    Perhaps you'll get to enjoy her with decks in glorious creamy light brown.

     

    Seriously though, I'm not going to commit seppuku over colours. 

    Like I said, I'd like to stay in the ball park, but it doesn't have to be slam dunk.

  7. For those who want to do this version in 1/350 - good luck. To the best of my knowledge, the 1/350 is the 1941/42 version.

     

    As for the wood colour - they used hinoki cypress and not teak. FWIW

    I thought that was later.

    As supplies became harder to come by, and the need to conceal certain construction projects became more acute, they switched to hinoki. That's what I've heard. I'm not going to argue about it though - I'm not in any way an expert (if there are experts out there, feel free to get the knuckle dusters out). 

  8. pretty neat!   porting it out on the side leaves plenty of room for the flight deck.   nice match up of the second deck area   ;)     looks great!

     

    I'm trying, I'm trying.

     

     

    A few minutes ago the admiral came into the kitchen (where I'm sat) to get something from the fridge. Passing me, she said in her very special "Oh-by-the-way" tone of voice: "Why is the colour of the upper deck different from the lower one?"

  9. Ah ... Friday beer and plastic kits - the finer things in life.

     

    I've attached a thing or two.

     

    post-5830-0-68107400-1474044471_thumb.jpg

     

    One of the things being the most outlandish ship's funnel you're ever likely to lay eyes on (admittedly I'm far from "well travelled" when it comes to funnels.). 

     

    post-5830-0-20490900-1474044490_thumb.jpg

  10. great job on the planking color........absolutely love it!   :)

     

    on a ship this small.......great idea to add locator pins inside the turrets.  it copies the process they do on larger kits........the little plastic ring that goes over the locator pin........and did you achieve it?..........I'm sure you did!   ;)     nice work!

    Thanks!

     

    No, i didn't add a ring to hold the pinned turret in place, if that's what you mean, so the turrets are both movable and re-movable.

    I don't think I could have done it even if wanted to - the bottom of the piece the turrets are on sits directly on top of the bit below it, so there's no room to add anything underneath.

     

    Don't think it's going to be a problem. There's going to be a deck above the turrets, and it doesn't look like there'll be enough air between the turret top and that deck for the turrets to come completely loose. And, if I see someone holding the ship upside down, they'll get a headbutt. 

     

     

    Thanks all around!

    ... scholars and gentlemen both, etc, etc

    You're too kind ... I'm just another chimp with a brush collection.

     

     

    Sam

  11. I have some very nice 1:700 scale ship models with full detail sets sitting in my closet. Looking them over, each time I think I might build one, I get scared away by the extreme small scale. One of these days I am going to get started on one even if I screw it up.

     

    For me it's the other way around. I come from a 1:72 - 1:48 war gaming background so I'm used to tiny soldiers and tanks.

    I get intimidated by some of the humongous builds you see here, and the big kits in the hobby stores!

    A bit like moving from frying hot dogs to four course dinner ...

     

    Build those kits - you won't regret it.

    Oh, and post 'em.

     

     

    Sam

  12. After some painting, some thinking, and then some more painting and thinking, the Akagi has a planked lower flight deck.

     

    post-5830-0-47793600-1473878131_thumb.jpg

     

    The deck has received several washes and dry brushes, using slightly different tones of woody brown.

    It turned out a tad darker than in my original vision, but I'm quite pleased with the result nonetheless. 

    When viewed from a distance, all the different washes/dry brushes come together in a way that kinda mimics the way a deck is made up of planks with slightly different tones (due to natural differences in the wood, wear etc.)

    It has proven completely impossible, at least with my photographic equipment, to do the effect justice in photos ... but it's there ... trust me. 

    (or maybe I'm all nicely bundled up in the local loony bin, on medication, imagining everything.)

     

    Turrets

     

    I wanted movable turrets (who doesn't?).

    showing how I went about it will allow me to introduce one of my secret weapons, meet Mr. Guitar String Drill:

     

    post-5830-0-59421700-1473878234_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-45469400-1473878248_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-43898300-1473878263_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-01292300-1473878285_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-27052800-1473878335_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-74618100-1473878308_thumb.jpg

     

    post-5830-0-39513800-1473878372_thumb.jpg

  13. The Test Strips

    Art is a pain in the hiney. I know, my father was a dress designer, I've followed art school, and I still can't get across what I want  ...

     

    Colour

    (Finaly someone who knows how to write the word ;) ) Maybe try a light underground, and dry-brush a reddish (teak) colour on top. Define the planks by drawing a dark line, to represent the seam between them ...

     

     

     
    Since you mentioned art (yes, a mention is enough), you probably realise that the statement "There are no true colours." is the beginning of a slippery slope that descends into realms upon realms of wild eyed, cheese munching insanity ...
     
    Your painting suggestion is a good one. I'll do some tests.
     
     
    Better man those coastal defences!
    There are people who WILL go to war over the spelling of the "C"-word.
     
     
    Sam
  14. Thank you all for the input!

    It is much appreciated!

     

    I should have been clearer about what I meant yesterday, my bad (While I was doing the test strips I suddenly realised that it wasn't Friday, and that I had to get up the next day ...).

     

     

    This is how the deck in question, unpainted, looks on the model.

     

    post-5830-0-69046500-1473267055_thumb.jpg

     

    As you can see, there isn't much that can be done about the direction of the planking, even if the real thing had been planked width-wise. 

     

     

    The test strips

    They aren't meant to represent single planks! 

    Since the planks are modelled on miniature, I figured I'd start by giving the deck a darker base-coat, and then dry-brush with a lighter colour to bring out the individual planks.

    THAT'S what I was trying to get across in the test strips - the lighter bands are supposed to be the individual planks, picked out with dry-brushing.

    I see now how no one in the entire universe would understand that from looking at the photos ... not one of my brightest art moments ...

     

     

    Colour:

     

    Yeah, I know the real thing had teak decks.

    And that teak is often a more reddish brown sort of colour.

     

    The thing is, I did some nosing around on Google, looking for pics of aircraft carrier decks, and teak decks in general, and to my eye many of them look a sort of sandy brown.

    The painting guide for this model, and others, also suggest using "Tan" for the wooden decks. There are slight variations, but the colour is light, sandy brown.

     

    That said, people perceive colour differently.

     

    I'm also looking for something that will work in the scale in question - how will the deck look on a ship seen from afar. 

     

     

    And Sam, thanks for the tip!

    Shattered Sword  definitely looks like a book I might enjoy reading.

    Added to wish list!

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