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catopower

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  1. Nothing more to report here, but I ran across this amazing build of the exact same Shipyard 1/96-scale paper model kit on the German paper model forum Kartonbau.de. OMG, what an incredible build. I'm completely blown away. I highly recommend checking this out for yourselves. 

     

    I took the following photo of the completed model from the builder's blog, but there are MANY more great photos there, and hopefully this will inspire people to check it out.

     

    24584636ut.jpg.da5db1bc4b65c942cbfa867d4d552d10.jpg

     

    The URL for the build log is: http://www.kartonbau.de/forum/hms-mercury-1779-1-96-von-shipyard-construction-reports-ships/board5-ships/t25313-f6/?l=2&l=2

     

    The blog has already given me ideas, including starting over! ;)

     

    Clare

     

     

  2. Hi Dave,

     

    I'm sorry I haven't been around much lately. But, I show up and see that your Colonial Schooner is looking terrific! Nice job on that hull planking! That lower hull looks slick.

     

    I like the contrasting color of the timberheads against the bulwarks too.

     

    Very fine job. I'm sorry I haven't been paying closer attention!

     

    Clare

  3. Not much to add to the build, but I did get an opportunity to work on the model a bit. One of the San Francisco Bay Area ship model clubs I belong to had a table at the San Mateo County Fair. The clubs here are very low on manpower, so we had one person work a few hours each day. I took the first day, a Saturday afternoon. I brought two small projects to work on. One was a beginner kit that is part of Amati's First-Step series, which I worked on to familiarize myself with it and to show people that they don't have to take on a massive project to start with. The other was my HMS Mercury kit.

     

    You can only make so much progress when you're interacting with the public, but I did manage to do some work.

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    The model doesn't look much different than it did, but the internal bulwarks pieces are now being secured into place. Since I started that task, I'll plan on finishing that much before I go back to my wooden projects. I will probably add the doors back into place that I had to temporarily remove.

     

    I have to try not to get too distracted, as the next step will involve installing the gun deck furniture, including furnishing the great cabin. That's fun stuff, so it will be hard to resist!

     

    Clare

     

     

     

  4. Thanks Carl. I looked for that book and it looks interesting. But, used copies start at $150. So, I think I'll have to wait for the movie... ;)

     

    I know what to keep an eye out for though. In the meantime, I'll focus on "The Genius of Japanese Carpentry" book. One of the side projects waiting for me is Woody Joe's 1/75-scale Horyu-ji 5-story pagoda kit, and I think I will see a lot of the details from that book in this model.

     

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    It's a nice looking kit, but it will have to wait until I get some ship modeling done. 

     

    Clare

     

  5. Speaking of Douglas Brooks and the practice of traditional Japanese trades, he's back in Japan now building a cormorant fishing boat (and Ukaibune) under the direction of what I believe is the last of the builders of these boats. He's blogging about it now, which you can follow at http://blog.douglasbrooksboatbuilding.com.

     

    This project is being documented (measurements taken for CAD) by Marc Bauer of Tri-Coastal Marine and there's hint that there might be a publication in the works.

     

    In the meantime, I'm trying to convince Douglas Brooks to allow the publication of specifications for a couple boats for ship modeling purposes. There are very few plans available for us to build from. Most are published in Admiral Paris's Souvenirs de Marine, and I'm kind of wondering about some of the details on those. Also, those plans are drawn based on western practices, and hard to use as you have to work to extract the information needed to build a model the correct way, based on Japanese practices. At least, that's what I find.

     

    Clare

     

     

  6. Carl,

     

    thanks for recommending that book. I bought a used copy online. It was waiting for me recently when I'd gotten home. I opened up the package and stood in the doorway for 10 minutes just fascinated by the material in the book. I told boatbuilder Douglas Brooks about it. As you may know, he's been something of a mentor to me on the subject of Japanese traditional boats. Of course, he comments that he knows Azby and he's a great guy.

     

    Anyway, I think I'll learn some thing from this book!

     

    Clare

  7. Well it's done! I finished Woody Joe's Shinmei-zukuri shrine model. It took a while since I was documenting the steps – just posted the 8th and final part of the build.

     

    Here are some final pics. If your interested in building this or any other Woody Joe kit, as always, I highly recommend buying from the Japanese online hobby dealer Zootoyz at http://zootoyz.jp.

     

    You can read the final post on this build here: https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/2017/05/23/building-woody-joes-shinmei-zukuri-shrine-part-viii-completion/

     

    IMG_2904.thumb.jpg.70f614f77f2d6071a247b96398477334.jpgIMG_2907.thumb.jpg.4d702a905b98bdf60969549e0e905066.jpgIMG_2910.thumb.jpg.00eff218f65031b58532ddcb51345267.jpgIMG_2911.thumb.jpg.889176b2d1eee052ddf14e7390e03945.jpgIMG_2913.thumb.jpg.32593b2fe70f2c2bc896afa74d20ade4.jpgIMG_2914.thumb.jpg.fb9fa05807abf126005e580b39d0b898.jpg

  8. Hi Carl,

     

    I'd love to know the name of your book on Japanese temple construction. I think I could learn a lot from something like that.

     

    In the meantime, I just posted Part V of my build, which puts me just about half way through completion of the project: https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/2017/05/04/building-woody-joes-shinmei-zukuri-shrine-part-v/#more-3716

     

    Here are some photos...

     

     

    IMG_2800.thumb.jpg.a88951ab6ff70fcd238342da24c7d0f5.jpgIMG_2809.thumb.jpg.69dbdac428d7bdd4e7ad6a1e4dc30e81.jpgIMG_2818.thumb.jpg.8f070daecd1799648037a88c44b7fe7a.jpgIMG_2824.thumb.jpg.b2d742a61fa5f5d98b225374e4d3475b.jpgIMG_2831.thumb.jpg.03e90f24ab0e92faa8a6fe63d6746940.jpg

     

    Thanks,

    Clare

     

  9. Thanks Grant, Eddie,

     

    This is a very short turn-around build. Blogging already takes about 5 times longer than the actual build itself, so I'm just posting the updates on my own site, rather than posting again here. But, I'll upload some update photos.

     

    I just completed step 4 out of the total of 12 steps, and now need to write it up. Lots of photos taken though.

     

    Here are a few, so you can see how it's coming along. 

     

    IMG_2717.thumb.jpg.48beb8b6a37e237c2a3d71cfa006c9e8.jpgIMG_2732.thumb.jpg.f9961a708a17e7566a7dac37b4732eda.jpgIMG_2760.thumb.jpg.44cf0732d6dbdb5884072d497f3d4daf.jpgIMG_2779.thumb.jpg.a863551101447762c4ad3ed3b0ea1898.jpg

     

    For some detailed descriptions of the steps, please visit https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/category/non-ship-models/shinmei-zukuri-shrine/

     

    Thanks,

    Clare

  10. I haven't been posting much here on MSW lately, but I have been doing a lot of shipmodeling work, spread out across a few active projects.

     

    Recently, I kind of hit a slick spot in the road and been spinning my wheels a bit. I got bogged down in some details and got distracted by other things – don't you hate when life gets in the way? :) 

     

    Now, a while back, I got some non-ship model type kits made by Woody Joe – Yes, I've been kind of Woody Joe crazy the past couple years. The Japanese wooden model manufacturer just makes some really cool stuff. Also, someone sent me a 5-story pagoda kit along with some smaller project kits I got, with the idea that I'd write up something about them. Well, I've had them for a while now, and since I've been in a slump anyway, it seemed like it was the right time to take on at least one of them.

     

    I picked out the kit called Shinmei-Zukuri Jinjya or Shrine. This is a neat little kit that Woody Joe claims to be a 10-hour project. Of course, with blogging, photographing and all, it would take a lot longer than that. But, the idea is that it's not a forever project. 

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    I bought the kit from, who else, Zootoyz. It cost roughly $85 plus shipping. Of course, the exchange rate has improved immensely for us after I went to Japan last September when it was terrible. 

     

    This is a neat 10" x 10" kit that I will probably gift when completed. It's all laser cut and even includes the landscaping. The instructions look very straight forward.

     

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    The model is that of a very old style Japanese Shinto shrine. The architectural style dates about to the early 6th century Japan. The existing examples of this style of shrine are rebuilt to exact specifications every 20 years, so the style of construction has been maintained for the past 1500 years. This architecture can be seen at the Ise Grand Shrine in Japan's Mie Prefecture. There's a short Wikipedia entry on it here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinmei-zukuri

     

    If you're interested in the kit, I'm making this a topic of a build log on my blog site here: https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/category/non-ship-models/shinmei-zukuri-shrine/

     

    This should go pretty quickly. Then, maybe I can make some better progress on my ship modeling projects!

     

    Clare

     

     

     

     

     

  11. Thanks for the kind words, Craig. I hope you enjoy the kit. Will you be posting your build here on MSW?

     

     

    In the meantime, I still have one of the Woody Joe mini-Yakatabune kits and also the Kanrin Maru kit available if anyone is interested. 

     

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    If you're curious about the Kanrin Maru kit and the original warship, I have several posts on the subject on my blog: 

    https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/category/ship-model-blogs/kanrin-maru-build/

     

    And, if you're curious about the Mini-Yakatabune kit, I also posted some info about my earlier build on my blog:

    https://shipmodeler.wordpress.com/category/ship-model-blogs/mini-yakatabune-build/

     

    Clare

     

  12. Hi Andrew,

     

    Sorry if I didn't catch a mention of this before, but those look like Marine Models kit plans of the Jeff Davis, and I know they made a kit.

     

    I took a look at the Blue Jacket plans for their kit, and they show the exact same feature. The plans also clearly show a staysail running across from the main topmast pole. Seems odd, but there it is in a second set of plans. 

     

    Clare

  13. Okay, before getting back to my other projects, I thought I'd wrap up this issue about getting the bulwarks into position so that the gunports line up with the inside pieces. First, I had to finish up the windows, which worked out fine, using a film of canopy glue for the glass. They're not perfect, but they're mostly down inside the ship and not very visible. As I worked to get the bulwarks pieces in position, the addition of the newly windowed doors could wait.

     

    I cut and temporarily positioned the internal bulwarks pieces to help me with the alignment of the large outer bulwarks pieces. Without doing this, I don't know how one would know where the big pieces would fit.

    IMG_3734.thumb.jpg.781c4e8d194d0a9c6b554e4a9f02270b.jpg

    As you can see, some of the inner pieces have to be trimmed to fit. None are glued in at this point. You can see the seam where the large pieces meet between the first and second gun ports in the foreground on the left.

     

    At the bow, I ended up with a small gap for some reason.

     

    IMG_3733.thumb.jpg.25b205e233751de14bb463f8230736b1.jpg

    I will probably glue a support piece on the inside corners, which will be covered by the inside bulwarks pieces. I know the outer layer looks pretty gluey, but it's all going to get covered up anyway.

     

    Inside the great cabin, I didn't worry about the alignment except at the very stern. If everything else lines up, this area should be fine. I did discover than I needed to bend the stern transom framing back a little, so that things lined up better.

     

    IMG_3737.thumb.jpg.551b476061e325a18668dff5c5865c58.jpg

    Here's the same bulkhead viewed from the cabin forward of the great cabin...

     

    IMG_3736.thumb.jpg.f28be8169f2b768c80e474767f828e14.jpg

    And another view of the great cabin from a higher angle...

    IMG_3735.thumb.jpg.dda34a258fe7bc9be8c76ca9b7cf55d2.jpg

    It's pretty cool to be working with this kind of interior, as you never get this kind of detail in a wooden kit.

     

    That's all for now. I may tinker with installing the doors and adding the inner bulwarks pieces over time. But, this was a nice break, and I'm ready to make some progress on elsewhere.

     

    Until my next break!

     

    Clare

     

     

  14. Hi Shiphile,

     

    Those are some really great looking kits. I'd like to try one of the boxed kits sometime. I'm in the same fix regarding the HMS Mercury kit. It's a nice kit, but it's more money than I should really be spending.

     

    Anyway, I've started to take a shine to the smaller paper model kits in 1/96-scale. My first shipmodel was the Model Shipways Phantom, oh so long ago, and after that, I swore I'd only build in larger scales. But, I really enjoyed working in 1/96-scale with the HMS Alert kit. The smaller size makes for a neat model, plus it takes up far less room on the shelf.

     

    The low cost of these paper model kits makes it difficult not to go out and buy ones that I might be interested in building. Then, I thought it might be interesting to buy one and try enlarging it to another scale. I had to catch myself from going out and buying yet another kit – they're just so darned cool!

     

    Clare

  15. A long belated thanks, Zoltan! It's been, what, six months since I last posted? 

     

    I just finished writing up an article for SIS on buiding the HMS Alert paper model, so that's been occupying most of my paper modeling time for the past few months. With that done, and having spending a pretty significant amount of time working on my main wooden ship modeling projects, I thought I'd put a little time into HMS Mercury again.

     

    I've been contemplating those fake window panes and recently realized that forward partition is pretty much right under the edge of the forecastle deck, so those windows are pretty visible. Also, since I'm building this model so that the stern gallery windows are clear, you'll be able to look inside and see the windows in the aft partition as well. 

     

    So, I broke down and cut out those fake windows. I had to remove the partitions in order to do it, but that wasn't too bad.

     

    I actually managed to cut out just the fake glass panes of those 4-pane windows in the forward partition and its doors. However, the after partitions and doors all have 6-pane windows, so I had to cut out the whole window section in one piece and then rebuild them.

     

    IMG_3682.thumb.jpg.9ee92e52c22542718fdd66f5d7b95ef8.jpg

     

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    As you can see, the results aren't perfect, but I'm reasonably satisfied, because I'm pretty sure I can't do better than this. I'll try using some canopy glue to create the window pane glass.

     

    So far, I have all but 4 doors left to do. Once that's done, I'll move on to the next thing.

     

    Before I started getting obsessed with getting rid of the fake windows, I went on to the next step, which was to add the gunport frames to the bulwarks core pieces.IMG_3683.thumb.jpg.4583eefe2e03ffdd16a36bcbb5a97a72.jpg

    The frames came from the laser-cut super detail set I purchased from GPM. It was a little confusing figuring out which piece was which, because many of the pieces vary in shape and have unique part numbers. 

     

    I should point out here that one of the reasons I got inspired to do some work on the model again, is because I was at a local IPMS conference and spoke with someone who was building his first paper model, and I think it was also his first ship model, the larger 1/72-scale boxed kit of the same ship, HMS Mercury. He's doing a great job and some photos of his progress were posted on Ages of Sail's blog here:

     

    https://blog.agesofsail.com/2017/03/08/a-172-scale-hms-mercury-card-model/

     

    Clare

     

  16. Hi Druxey – It would be harder to part with them if I didn't have so darned many of them!

     

    I actually have another Kanrin Maru kit that I've been working on (was working on when I had more time), and I plan to eventually build the Nippon Maru, just not right now. While Woody Joe seems to limit production and sell a kit until they run out, I think these should be available for a while yet. Also, I still have a Charles Yacht, another Hacchoro, another Higaki Kaisen, the Kanrin Maru kit I mentioned, a Sir Winston Churchill, an old line (before laser-cut production) Sengokubune and an out of production Kitamaesen to build. I've been thinking I really should add a couple of these to the sales list too.

     

    But, in fact, if nobody wants to buy any of these kits, I won't exactly be heartbroken!

     

    Clare

  17. Let me add that with the Kanrin Maru kit, I'll add a copy of the kit review I wrote in Ships in Scale a couple years ago. Also, since I'm already building another identical kit, I can share my research on the subject and some construction photos.

     

    Also, with the Nippon Maru, I'll include a CD with the photos (over 200 I think) I took aboard her sister ship, Kaiwo Maru. There are some various small differences between the two, but the photos should provide some useful details.

     

    You can always access my Wood Joe Kit Builder's Guide on my shipmodeler blog. Just hover over the Resources menu, scroll down to Shop Notes and choose Woody Joe Kit Builder's Guide. I just looked at it again and realized there's something I should add about identifying parts. So, I'll probably be updating it in the next month or so.

     

    Clare

  18. Hi Don,

     

    In fact, I just jumped back in on the Independence and going full tilt to get her done. I think I'll have the rigging finished this weekend, and then I have to work on finishing and mounting the swivels. Also, I lost the compass I made, so I'll be remaking that as well. That should be it.

     

    Unfortunately, I haven't had time to blog about it. Too much to do!

     

    Clare

     

     

  19. Well, as long as I'm posting today about needing some Syren 5/52" Swiss pear single blocks, I thought I'd also take the time to offer some kits that I have on hand.

     

    I've been realizing that I just have way too big a stack of Woody Joe ship model kits, all brand new in the boxes. I'm cutting down the stack, though I will still have something like a half dozen to build!

     

    Two kits are still available: Yakatabune mini-kits, 1/75-scale Kanrin Maru w/sails. While they all have well illustrated instructions, please keep in mind that what text there is it's in Japanese. 

     

    I don't really NEED to sell these, but I'm not getting to them any time soon. I've listed some of them on Amazon.com, but I'm offering them here for a bit less. Please contact me for more information, photos, options.

     

     

    Yakatabune mini-kits (1 sold, 1 still available)

    Length 210mm
    Width 49mm
    Height

    57mm

    $45 + shipping

    MINI-YAKATA-MAIN_.jpg.6480799fd54b6b2a82929651c6444bf9.jpg

    MINI-YAKATA-2_.jpg.37ebb7cfbf46045f5d97dde59bfd7cc6.jpg

    MINI-YAKATA-3_.jpg.0028a02962c634e3b2de573826825449.jpg

     

     

    Kanrin Maru w/sails, 1/75 scale

     

    The Kanrin Maru was built by the Dutch at the request of the Japanese Shogun, becoming her first screw steamer and her second steam warship, the first being the paddlewheel corvette Kanko Maru (ex-Soembing). Kanrin Maru became the first Japanese navy ship to visit the United States as an escort for the Japanese embassy, arriving in San Francisco on March 17, 1860.

     

    Aboard the ship was then Lieutenant John M. Brooke, who with a handful of American sailors, was instrumental in the ship's successful navigation across the Pacific. The details of the journey are chronicled in the book John M. Brooke's Pacific Cruise and Japanese Adventure, 1858-1860.

     

    With the model kit, I'll add a copy of the kit review I wrote in Ships in Scale a couple years ago. Also, since I'm already building another identical kit, I can share my research on the subject and some construction photos.

    Length 820mm
    Width 203mm
    Height 487mm

    $320 + shipping

     

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  20. Hi All,

     

    I'm putting out a general call out to anyone who may have some extra 5/32" single Swiss pear blocks from Syren Ship Model Company. I'm running very short.

     

    As you may know, these are out of production and only boxwood blocks are now available and I don't need those.

     

    I've checked with Chuck Passaro just in case, but no luck. I have a small supply of other sizes of Swiss pear blocks. I'm hoping someone out there has an extra pack or two of the 5/32" singles they might be willing to sell or to trade for another size they might need.

     

    Thanks in advance for your responses,

    Clare

     

     

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