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Posted

Hooray Hooray, 
Mission "Singer Restoration" successfully accomplished.
With patience, WD40 and gun oil (I don't have sewing machine oil)

20210726_135318.thumb.jpg.0be07b7d1c4dbf647c3e8972cf56ccf0.jpg

Old real mechanics (love it)

20210726_135135.thumb.jpg.bb8c3e41e45afe5477c50800564bf031.jpg20210726_135151.thumb.jpg.33757520608c4848fd638f413d812b5b.jpg

Some problems here and there
The bottom wire was not picked up at first.

20210727_141340.thumb.jpg.67f15805d42bc9ac19eb9b1d80632c53.jpg
The footplate did not move.

20210726_172053.thumb.jpg.dda918005b9d6327d86bf6f4cdb634cf.jpg
finally after years of neglect a "singing sewing machine"

 

The first sewing test

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20210727_153054.thumb.jpg.394dbde1bf16cca15e3e6452cb0e69d7.jpg
And the sails are drawn on the sheet. The thinnest cotton I found (0.35mm thick)

20210801_122702.thumb.jpg.a7efe5b4b3cbfd0e9a1e3306b06e4385.jpg

Thanks for following, likes and comments

Posted (edited)

First of all your model is gorgeous and I love the old Singer machine!!!   I am curious to know the thread count on the sail cloth and the center to center on the stitching?  Please take the following as an alternative idea, not a criticism as no one can fault your workmanship.   Cloth sails cannot be made to scale if the scale is much smaller than about 1:24 including 1:45.    Your cloth APPEARS to have a low thread count and the stiches look to be about 0.07" long.   Full size canvas usually has a TC between 50 and 100 and duck is around 40X30.   At your scale this would be between 2000 and 4000 TC, which I do not believe exists.  There are cloths with a TC in the neighborhood of 1200 which would be closer to scale if you must use cloth.   If the stiches on a full size sail have an overly  large center to center such as 0.2"  the stiches you make on the model sail would have to be about 0.004" which I don't think can be done on any sewing machine.   At that C to C  of 0.004" the stitching should appear as a solid line.  If it is not too late, maybe look at sails made of something other than cloth and forgo sewing altogether. Alternatives that are closer to scale and look  better than cloth sails has been discussed at length lately here at MSW.   Plus there are You Tube videos and booklets on the "how to" make fantastic looking sails with non-woven materials.

Allan  

Edited by allanyed

PLEASE take 30 SECONDS and sign up for the epic Nelson/Trafalgar project if you would like to see it made into a TV series.   Click on http://trafalgar.tv   There is no cost other than the 30 seconds of your time.  THANK YOU

 

Posted
22 hours ago, G.L. said:

Patrick,

As a reward for your restoration work on the sewing machine you will receive this Tribute to Singer from me: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQfq1GcYzu0

 

  Geweldig...   Awesome

 

17 hours ago, allanyed said:

First of all your model is gorgeous and I love the old Singer machine!!! 

Thank you very much, much appreciated

 

17 hours ago, allanyed said:

If it is not too late,

No, 

The stitching was a test whether the machine works properly. 
This will be trying and testing first. To see which stitching will look good.

The cotton sheet looks ok. And somewhere I hope to be able to use it. I actually like this work with a sewing machine (makes me relax)
The cotton  is of course too thick (in a real  it is about half an inch thick) But with a rope sewn around it hopefully it won't be noticeable.

 

All options are still open

 

Once I found this on MSW and printed it. But I can't find this on the site anymore. Only through google search

https://modelshipworldforum.com/resources/Rigging_and_Sails/ScaleSails.pdf

Posted

The further sail making "adventures" 

All that follows are experiments. Which have probably already been done by others.

 

A first test with a piece the cotton cloth.20210809_130816.thumb.jpg.c37a8737273de70e74ddf57499d95daa.jpg

On this machine : the smaller the number the longer the stitching, the 0 goes backwards.  The smallest stitching (about 1mm) thus results in a line.

 

Results test 1 with a trial sail.
1 learn to stitch better and straighter(need to practice more)
2 Indeed too thick, but this can be camouflaged with the rope that is sewn around it.
3 the texture of the fabric is indeed quite rough.

20210808_154011.thumb.jpg.558c0a6aa3755689a71b75a4baf3af3e.jpg20210808_154035.thumb.jpg.6b47f0d9bee57472701f03633d9c7526.jpg20210808_154103.thumb.jpg.2a6eaf12f83164db65a2cbe2e71b4b0f.jpg20210808_154114.thumb.jpg.56bee1c23d1df07a6dc7671bd06d0cc9.jpg

Test 2 with the mizzen sail.

Looks pretty decent. But the silcspan will also deserves a chance after this.

20210808_160325.thumb.jpg.e8628a761fa3f7a0d109098ea937ee7c.jpg20210808_164215.thumb.jpg.20558393c68ce0b035eb14a5a72c4a29.jpg20210808_165334.thumb.jpg.4350371329cf41f0dcdc962b401d122a.jpg

 

Thanks for folowing, comments and likes

 

Posted

Your trial sails look pretty darn (no pun intended) good to me, especially the mizzen. 

The hand stitching is very neat😲 , great job!!

Current builds;

 Henry Ramey Upcher 1:25

Providence whaleboat- 1:25     HMS Winchelsea 1764 1:48 

Completed:

HM Cutter Sherbourne- 1:64- finished    Triton cross section scratch- 1:60 - finished 

Non ship:  SBD-3 Dauntless 1:48 Hasegawa -FINISHED

 

 

Posted
On 8/9/2021 at 4:25 PM, GrandpaPhil said:

Looking great!  Nice job with the sails!

 

On 8/9/2021 at 4:26 PM, Edwardkenway said:

Your trial sails look pretty darn (no pun intended) good to me, especially the mizzen. 

The hand stitching is very neat😲 , great job!!

 

On 8/10/2021 at 7:38 AM, G.L. said:

The stitching on the last photo is done very accurately. The leach also looks very well sewn.

 

On 8/10/2021 at 9:34 AM, Ab Hoving said:

Good project Backer!

Ab

Thanks the commentaar.

Backer is now on vacation. plenty of time to study about sails and sail making.

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Vacations over and back to real life.
Read all this on vacation.

https://www.hnsa.org/manuals-documents/age-of-sail/the-elements-and-practice-of-rigging-and-seamanship/sail-making-vol-i/   (HNSA)

https://www.hmsrichmond.org/sailmker.htm

https://textileranger.com/2016/08/01/even-more-sail-history/       (textiles)

http://www.bruzelius.info/Nautica/Rigging/Sails/Wasa-sails.html

 

Available info 16th century : virtually nothing;    17th century : some;    18th century and later : good.

 

All this is internet info, so it could be wrong

Thread thickness : Vasa would have had an average of 10 threads per cm. Converted there should be about 450 threads per cm on a scale of 1/45 (impossible)

Tabling : from a few inches (sailmaker) to a detailed description (HNSA page 93)

Clotchs width : 24 inch (sailmaker) 23-30 inch (textiles)

(bolt) ropes above and around the sail (HNSA page 95)

20210829_131508.thumb.jpg.c60f023d16fbee7494004a36b255eb03.jpg

Very nice sails can indeed be made with the silkspan, modelspan. But personally I don't like to see them on a wooden 16th century model.
That's why I continue my my cotton. 

I think I found something to make the texture less rough.

 

First :stitching seams

20210828_125610.thumb.jpg.8276e857cea01a1b0aac40259dbb7b65.jpg

 

"hem" (bad English ?? ) "omzomen" (in Dutch) and glue with diluted pva 20210828_144231.thumb.jpg.7829e2123f9a3647d2845076f24108fa.jpg

sew, sew, sew...20210829_115215.thumb.jpg.09f18e8315dfb6f6a0d3bde06ad3c95d.jpg Then smear the sail on both sides with colorless shoe polish ( beeswax and carnauba wax, wow)

20210829_115356.thumb.jpg.06c5f3e2bde0a8c153e75502bce4d892.jpg

result

20210829_115412.thumb.jpg.8cab8a961f1b54231b20ee9946fae7dc.jpg

Not quite yet what it could be, but better than the diluted black wash test (bad picture)20210829_115323.thumb.jpg.d82a276490435f1f2b5d40f9c9219e91.jpg

Thanks for comments, likes and following

20210829_115459.jpg

Posted

Nice work, Patrick. A masterpiece is in the making.

 

Our holidays began end of August. Just came back from a little city trip to Antwerp. Always recomendable !

Went to "Modelbouw Baliën "- nearby Borgerhout and I felt like Alice in Wonderland. 

How scarce such shops have become.

Kind regards

 

Christian

 

"The original always beats the copy"

(supportive statement)

Posted (edited)
On 9/3/2021 at 6:20 PM, Barbossa said:

Nice work, Patrick. A masterpiece is in the making.

 

Our holidays began end of August. Just came back from a little city trip to Antwerp. Always recomendable !

Went to "Modelbouw Baliën "- nearby Borgerhout and I felt like Alice in Wonderland. 

How scarce such shops have become.

Thanks Christian,

 

Antwerp is indeed a nice city.

Actually there are 2 model shops in Antwerp. I have the luxury of having both of them "close by".
Problems are the traffic jams around Antwerp. If you want to go to the other bank of the Scheldt, a few hours delay is no exception

image.png.0fc3c864aab99864a87a04486bf2ad9c.png

In the meantime, stitching and sewing continues. With a new mizzen sail (messed up the first one)

20210905_102029.thumb.jpg.febcd4a02b9359b30120dcb6a6cf4ae5.jpg

 

Edited by Backer
Posted

Patrick,

 

Just catching up - super nice work with the sails and repairing that classic Singer 🏆 lol

 

Regards,

Michael

Current buildSovereign of the Seas 1/78 Sergal

Under the table:

Golden Hind - C Mamoli    Oseberg - Billings 720 - Drakkar - Amati

Completed:   

Santa Maria-Mantua --

Vasa-Corel -

Santisima Trinidad cross section OcCre 1/90th

Gallery :    Santa Maria - Vasa

 

 

 

 

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
On 9/5/2021 at 12:13 PM, Louie da fly said:

Those sails look very good, Patrick. And yes, "hem" is the correct term in English.

 

Steven

Thanks. 

I get English lessons for free on this forum 😉👍

On 9/12/2021 at 5:17 PM, md1400cs said:

Patrick,

 

Just catching up - super nice work with the sails and repairing that classic Singer 🏆 lol

 

Regards,

Thanks.

Bringing this machine back to working condition gave me great satisfaction

 

All sails are stitched and sewn. 

Now the bonnets are tied. I probably misunderstood the drawings and all this knotwork is not historically correct.
But it looks neat (to me). And there's a logic to it
The bonnet is very quick and easy to remove. Just loosen the rope on the left side and pull . All the rope come loose and the bonnet falls off the sail.

 

Drawing/result

20210916_192003.thumb.jpg.6ed3af776fa94f64b86d3e95a1db8b76.jpg

method :

Make holes

20210913_111831.thumb.jpg.7dfa294937a1ec6090083006070c4c39.jpg

"sewing"

20210916_191442.thumb.jpg.40597f12b9202afc6e92cd1c0509e364.jpg20210916_191540.thumb.jpg.0ba721061345b8d39c867805a0ce078d.jpg20210916_191709.thumb.jpg.697a5f30e568f0a14729f264aa68e2d6.jpg

Sewing an "eye" to both the sides of the sail.

20210918_081030.thumb.jpg.15dda4164003ba6e4172a71e7a4d80eb.jpg

tie up (both sides)

20210918_112246.thumb.jpg.f99548f9e83bc1fa9cc2994d84fd28b5.jpg20210918_112417.thumb.jpg.a0627708af9a1b96ac88d5e9fb38014a.jpg

front and back

20210916_192131.thumb.jpg.a633caaa1b89ba04394dbd9a0b672e53.jpg20210916_192114.thumb.jpg.86936f1c6164f9bac4f9e0c14f6de80f.jpg

All sailes (except the spritsail)

20210925_145528.thumb.jpg.181567d87dbe9711358c2f36707a740d.jpg20210925_145541.thumb.jpg.e2e0bc2d3cc6a0ae0f345a0657489735.jpg20210925_145549.thumb.jpg.d25e252105adfe6e23e788e7422df755.jpg

Made cleats (D18 / 2)

20210924_185447.thumb.jpg.99384ae4a9012dd4ae43e898ec849f98.jpg

Cleats glued on the yards.

20210925_145608.thumb.jpg.db7441f2f5fd0984e618a813fbdcfc59.jpg

Thanks for following, likes and comments

Posted

Beautiful work, Patrick. And thanks for the step-by-step photos of the bonnet connection. I'm planning to do bonnets myself on a future build, and this will be a valuable resource to me.

 

Steven

Posted

Thanks for comments and likes 👍.

 

Of course anyone is free to use this method. But as already mentioned correct or not? Who knows.

Posted

As I look at your excellent and meticulous work on your sails, I look at my sails on the Boyer and the Utrecht and we do pretty much the same details. I do all the sewing by hand using many Dutch books for that particular era of the ship I am building. 

Sails for the Fluit will be much simpler. 

Marcus 

Current Built: Zeehaen 1639, Dutch Fluit from Dutch explorer Abel J. Tasman

 

Unofficial motto of the VOC: "God is good, but trade is better"

 

Many people believe that Captain J. Cook discovered Australia in 1770. They tend to forget that Dutch mariner Willem Janszoon landed on Australia’s northern coast in 1606. Cook never even sighted the coast of Western Australia).

Posted
On 9/27/2021 at 2:43 PM, flying_dutchman2 said:

I do all the sewing by hand

:imNotWorthy:  ja wadde (Flemish) easily translated as WOW

 

 

Small update (as always from October on, most of my hobby time will go to military modeling)

All sails are tied to the yards.

20211003_094217.thumb.jpg.4dd855537f95a47731fcbb3d38ebe033.jpg
Bought a book as preparation for a next project.

20211003_093651.thumb.jpg.b7addcf4a0156e4ac7cc3eb1228f4aae.jpg
To discover this

20211003_094133.thumb.jpg.14d58a27bbbe6d92e570f89903b783e3.jpg

I think I will (have to) do this step all over again 😟:default_wallbash:

dont now yet 🤔


 

Posted
On 10/3/2021 at 10:15 AM, Backer said:

I think I will (have to) do this step all over again 😟:default_wallbash:

dont now yet 🤔

 So I'm going to do this again, the right way  ☹️ 

 

Posted
2 hours ago, Snug Harbor Johnny said:

  Q:  Why do I keep beating my head against the wall?   A:  It feels so good when I stop.  🙂    Johnny

Do you mean something like this  :default_wallbash:  and then 🤕.....  😉

 

A new saying

Once I knew very little and i thought that i did great work.
Now I know very much and i discovered that i did wrong work.

 

haha

 

 

 

Posted
6 hours ago, Backer said:

Do you mean something like this  :default_wallbash:  and then 🤕.....  😉

 

A new saying

Once I knew very little and i thought that i did great work.
Now I know very much and i discovered that i did wrong work.

 

haha

 

 

 

I think that banging one's head on the wall is actually part of model shipbuilding.  Don't we all have bruised foreheads from either banging the wall or facepalming?

Mark
"The shipwright is slow, but the wood is patient." - me

Current Build:                                                                                             
Past Builds:
 La Belle Poule 1765 - French Frigate from ANCRE plans - ON HOLD           Triton Cross-Section   

 NRG Hallf Hull Planking Kit                                                                            HMS Sphinx 1775 - Vanguard Models - 1:64               

 

Non-Ship Model:                                                                                         On hold, maybe forever:           

CH-53 Sikorsky - 1:48 - Revell - Completed                                                   Licorne - 1755 from Hahn Plans (Scratch) Version 2.0 (Abandoned)         

         

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                

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