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Everything posted by AON
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Druxey these are the wee bits I watch for and have a special place they are saved in. Thanks for sharing! Alan
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De Zeven Provinciën 1665 by Dražen - Scale 1:45
AON replied to Drazen's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1501 - 1750
Nicely done!- 487 replies
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- ship of the line
- 80 guns
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De Zeven Provinciën 1665 by Dražen - Scale 1:45
AON replied to Drazen's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1501 - 1750
So I had the boss look at it with me. She says it is blue lettering on a light blue background but noticed one upper part of the bend on the right is pure white background. I asked if the light blue could be the ribbon in the shadow of the transom. She didn't think so but then how do you explain the splash of white? She does not see the gold trim whereas I still do.- 487 replies
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- ship of the line
- 80 guns
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De Zeven Provinciën 1665 by Dražen - Scale 1:45
AON replied to Drazen's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1501 - 1750
I am looking at the image posted above and I see blue letters on a white background with gold trim... but my left eye is not all it should be and my right eye compensates so possibly the white is a pale blue? In my opinion the pale blue seems an odd background if the lettering was meant to be clear from a distance, but I am no expert. I should ask my wife. 😉- 487 replies
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- ship of the line
- 80 guns
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De Zeven Provinciën 1665 by Dražen - Scale 1:45
AON replied to Drazen's topic in - Build logs for subjects built 1501 - 1750
Blue letters on white ribbon. Ribbon has gold trim. This combination looks very very good! The carver's wife must have picked them out.- 487 replies
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- ship of the line
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Good morning Mark, I followed up on the above post of yours. It took quite a while to get all the information which condenses to the following: The document is 6 pages, 10" x 16", at 70 pounds sterling each plus VAT (tax) and shipping. They only offer photos at this time due to the age and condition of them. Photocopying might cause more damage .... however they are digitizing the documents and digital copies may be available in a year or so at reduced pricing.
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hope to see more - espero ver mas
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Greg, I ordered the book after reading your post copied above. It came in today. Not only do I have the quote in the original print now, it is accompanied by a photo of the figurehead of the Boyne with William III on horseback. A great reference. And then to add to this, I now know the original carver's name (pg. 21) of this original figurehead of HMS Bellerophon as described above. Thank you! Alan
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Thank you for the suggestion Carl. I searched on the internet and found a few good examples but after having simply shorten them up I believe they do not look so bad... definitely not as majestic as they could have been but it would have been too ornamental and costly for a mere 74 gun ship of the line . Below are the last of these photos. I shortened the wings, changed the cape, and straightened out his back a bit as with all the handling it was beginning to go into a landing stance . The front and hind legs seem a bit thick but I cannot go much thinner on this clay model. I haven't the skill Later this week I will pick up some squares of Linden (local boxwood) for carving and when I feel the need for a change I will start hacking away to get some 3X enlarged practice sample pieces. Until then I need to get back to making frames.
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Worked on it a bit more today and I have all the features on. I am not happy with the cape and I can hear one special someone whispering the wings are much to large and would break off with the first wave impact.... but I wanted to see what it would look like. So tomorrow I will work on the cape and cut the wings down to half size with no fold (simplified).2018-03-24 15.25.08.mp4
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Had my eye injection yesterday. At 10 week intervals now from 4 weeks. Hope to progress to 12 weeks and eventually be healed but that could be 5 to 8 years I am told. So yesterday was an painful day. Today I can see without tearing up or having a massive head/eye ache but I must stay out of dusty environments for 3 days so no shop time for me. So I worked on my Marquette sculpture. Very first attempt. I must say this is fun. Looked through the house for an old wire cloths hanger but everything is plastic! So I used 12 gauge copper wire for the internal support. It seems to be holding up okay. I have to work on the mane, tail, wings, and Bellerophon's head and cloak. That will be tomorrow and Sunday if necessary.
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Carl Sorry to confuse you, think of what I was going through! Thank you for the link. It was very informative. Mine will be a pole for now. Eventually it will have a sharp head attached, but it will about 15 feet long only because everything is larger than life when part of a figurehead. Is it a javelin or spear. One thing I know it is not a pike or lance .Alan
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so size does matter? Many images of the "stick" show it with a head, whereas others do not. According to the story the lead head melted off when the beast breathed fire at it. The melted lead flowed into it's mouth and killed it. So at the beginning of the fight it was a spear and at the end it was a javelin?
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Good evening Mark, I understand that there are no images of the original first figurehead on the first HMS Bellerophon. I could only find a short simple description of it. It, the very first, was damaged early in her career (7 years) and was replaced with a figure of only Bellerophon of which only the head remains at the Museum because the remainder was rotten and or partially destroyed as the hulk "Captivity" was being broken up. When replace in 1793, it was a time when the Naval Board was starting to cut spending and figureheads were getting hit so a simplified figurehead makes sense. I can find no image/sketch/painting of the very first or any full image/sketch/painting of any replacement on the internet or books I have access to. There is only a photograph of the head on display at the museum. Having said that, I also imagine the head in the museum might not be the second figurehead head but possibly a third as she had 30 years service, and had been in a number of notable battles prior to becoming a prison hulk. But of course I cannot substantiate this. I've read NMM has numerous original sketches of figureheads made for board approval prior to the carvers being contracted to work on them but they are not sorted, filed or catalogued as they are considered poorly made sketches... not worth the effort I suppose. So the sketches I've created are my interpretation of the description: "Before it was damaged the figurehead represented Bellerophon as a nude figure draped in a red cloak riding Pegasus, his right arm raised, holding a javelin. The horse’s wings were spread." Source: NMM. I have also read that they were all basically painted white, with very little colour. So from the description I imagine only the cloak was red, Bellerophon, Pegasus and the spear were white. Possibly the javelin (spear) was black(?).
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David, I will always be interested in any and all comments, suggestions and help. As you know I might circle around a bit before I agree or follow what was actually the best advice. I call this my learning curve. It is steep and mostly my own doing. I have about 20 different images of Bellerophon and Pegasus together and about 17 of Pegasus alone. One has Bellerophon and a wingless Pegasus which in my mind is more believable as the wings represent speed and so do not have to be factual... but then there is the beast to contend with. Of all of these images I've collected only one has the wings behind Bellerophon's legs and I am not a fan of how it looks but I imagine it may have kept his legs from getting beaten and chafed. Here it is... If you have a different one please send it over!
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