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Spanish Galleon by Jeff T - Revell - 1:96 - PLASTIC - with modifications


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32 minutes ago, Twokidsnosleep said:

Nice mods on the figures

You are like Frankenstein...an arm from here a leg from there, different head et voila a new sailor!

Thanks, Scott!

 

Thanks to putty in its various forms, I can keep the possibilities open for modifications.  Otherwise, the few available poses limit the choices a bit.  The modification process can be quite long and tedious, though, so I probably won’t do many modifications for the figures out on deck when I get to that stage.

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  • 2 weeks later...

A while back, I ordered a set of resin treasure chests. 

 

IMG_1225.thumb.JPG.7b9fbdbeedd85435e35a34b520d5d01c.JPG

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They are nominally 1/72 scale, but I think they will still go nicely with my current set-up, since any difference in scale is not very obvious. 

 

I have chosen a few of them to use inside the captain's cabin and the pilot's house, and have mapped out plans for placing them in each:

 

IMG_2143.thumb.JPG.95c42c61fc286c442602bd90a7475828.JPGIMG_2160.thumb.JPG.27a1a6c99e3f86b5c04e9d9967c704f7.JPG

The small rectangles that I have drawn in along the main lines of the cabin walls show where the windows will be located. The larger tan rectangles represent the places where the beds will be, and the white central rectangles represent the tables.

The galleries surrounding the cabins are outlined with the thick black lines, and the thin lines drawn near them with the spaced hash marks indicate the taffrails.

 

So my next "mini project" for the build will be cleaning up six of the "chests" (including one which is a group of bags of coins) and painting them.

 

 

 

 

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1 hour ago, Ferrus Manus said:

Mind you, the ship itself is actually in about 1/64 scale- wrongly labelled by Revell. 

Yes, and that is why I think that the 1/72 scale chests will work out OK — not too far out of scale.

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On 7/21/2023 at 12:22 PM, Jeff T said:

A while back, I ordered a set of resin treasure chests. 

 

IMG_1225.thumb.JPG.7b9fbdbeedd85435e35a34b520d5d01c.JPG

IMG_1219.thumb.JPG.9b57a2fe27f56cc83258ba106429b184.JPG

They are nominally 1/72 scale, but I think they will still go nicely with my current set-up, since any difference in scale is not very obvious. 

 

I have chosen a few of them to use inside the captain's cabin and the pilot's house, and have mapped out plans for placing them in each:

 

IMG_2143.thumb.JPG.95c42c61fc286c442602bd90a7475828.JPGIMG_2160.thumb.JPG.27a1a6c99e3f86b5c04e9d9967c704f7.JPG

The small rectangles that I have drawn in along the main lines of the cabin walls show where the windows will be located. The larger tan rectangles represent the places where the beds will be, and the white central rectangles represent the tables.

The galleries surrounding the cabins are outlined with the thick black lines, and the thin lines drawn near them with the spaced hash marks indicate the taffrails.

 

So my next "mini project" for the build will be cleaning up six of the "chests" (including one which is a group of bags of coins) and painting them.

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_0768.gif

Scott 

Current Build:
1/72 Zvezda The Black Pearl 

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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...

I forgot to mention in my previous post that I had to alter the treasure in the open chest a little before applying the primer due to a problem with the casting -- I think the resin had not completely filled the mold.

 

Anyway, the treasure chests are now done.

 

Here is a photo during the painting process, before final details were added:

 

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And after completion:

 

IMG_2371.thumb.JPG.09050397f990457985f45a509fdea6e0.JPGIMG_2378.thumb.JPG.b23cbbec8d53dcd5cd9a46c5e3590f52.JPGIMG_2373.thumb.JPG.477abb4e734918301296cd1afade1880.JPGIMG_2383.thumb.JPG.8cae3a2ec254b6389055c72717c7df32.JPG

I will leave them attached to their painting pedestals until the time comes to put them in the cabins. 

 

While I was applying a brown wash to the sacks of silver, I went back and also applied the wash and some linen color touch-up to the sheets of the beds that I made earlier.  I figured that with extended time at sea, the sheets would not be perfectly clean. 

 

Before:

 

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After:

 

IMG_2392.thumb.JPG.14deb41cb2d09efec31b192a521dba2b.JPG

My last project for the furnishings in the cabins will be the maps.

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  • 1 month later...
  • 3 weeks later...

Here's a little update.

 

I wanted to add some maps to the cabin furnishings, so I ended up using a copy of a famous 17th century map of the world from 1630 by the cartographer Henricus Hondius.  He was Dutch, but the place names on the map are in Latin, so  I think that that would still be OK for a Spanish galleon.  The copy is on a faux parchment paper:

 

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The parchment effect gives it a more antique look, and some maps from that time period may have been printed on parchment anyway.

 

This map is pretty large, so I honed in on a small area of it for the model:

 

DSC_2209crop.jpg.b7d7f1a9e5dfd3bac7686717ac917a20.jpg

I thought that by including a contemporary map of the Iberian peninsula and its surrounding water and also a map of the Canary Islands would be a nice way to link the ship to its nationality and to the 17th century.  I also wanted the maps to avoid emphasizing Spain's political aspirations and conflicts during that time period.  Therefore, the maps do not specifically focus on countries which were historical enemies of Spain (but are now its allies).

 

True, the map is very much out of scale for my ship, but I wanted to show recognizable detail, and by using a couple of very small portions of the big map, I could make a "large" wall map and a sizeable "desk map" for the captain's cabin.

 

The faux parchment paper is somewhat translucent, so in order to prevent the glue (used to affix the wall map) from soaking through it, I needed to paint the back side with tan acrylic paint.

 

I cut the area down to size after painting the back:

 

IMG_2508.thumb.JPG.2debb0ac97d69a1b75d4ea5e5dff5942.JPGIMG_2518.thumb.JPG.965c189d455c34ab528afceaf3caf10b.JPG

So a piece of this was trimmed down to fit on the inside wall of the fore bulkhead of the captain's cabin.  Below is what the bulkhead looks like from the "outside".  It will be eventually be situated just aft of the helm.

 

IMG_2607.thumb.JPG.c6fa697e5b9bd594218a82e776444632.JPG

The back side of it (inside the cabin) is where I glued the wall map:

 

IMG_2618.thumb.JPG.f144993ba3431857bc2ccec5582d6c5c.JPG

Note that the inside surface of the bulkhead is not flat.  Initially, it was flat, but it did not have any usable detail at all, because the windows were not open and nobody would be able to see inside the cabin if I built it "out of the box".  The window on the right is raised because it is where I glued a piece of clear polycarbonate to serve as "glass" to cover the window, which I had created by cutting out the center and gluing wire mesh over it, then painting it gold.  I purposely painted the inside walls of the cabin a dark color (Testor's Model Master Italian Dark Brown enamel) so that they would not be very visible and hopefully absorb much of the light, allowing the emphasis to be on lighter objects such as the maps, windows, beds, tables, chairs, figures, sea chests / treasure chests, and lanterns.

 

On the larger table, in the captain's cabin, I will place a map that I trimmed down to show the Canary Islands.  It will be laid out before the captain, who will be seated next to it.  In the pilot's house, I will place a rolled-up piece of the faux parchment on the smaller table (the "scroll" map idea is one that I have seen elsewhere on the forum).

 

IMG_2609.thumb.JPG.22dc00f8cb56107a7acc00818855bb16.JPG

So that concludes the cabin furnishings.

 

My next project will be to apply matte varnish to the glossy areas of the ship so that it will then be ready for me to glue down the gun carriages.

 

 

 

 

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19 hours ago, Jeff T said:

I cut the area down to size after painting the back:

Correction:  Actually, I recall that I had to cut the area down before I painted it, because the water in the acrylic paint makes the paper buckle and warp, and I needed to tape it down to try to prevent that.  It ended up buckling anyway, so I rolled it a bit to smooth out many of the buckles:

image.thumb.jpeg.ce42281d933ca238e799bdcf9fca64b2.jpeg

This rolling technique may be helpful if acrylic paint is needed on paper sails or flags.  Once the paint is completely dry, the paper can be unrolled and then rolled again in the opposite direction, repeating the process until the paper is flat.

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  • 5 months later...

I am finally back at work on my galleon after a hiatus of several months while I worked on a different project.  

 

There is not much new to show yet, though.  I just started to apply a matt varnish to the glossy upper surfaces of the ship.  I am brushing it by hand, because I have not had good luck with matt spray varnishes in the past, and I do not want to deal with an airbrush.  Brushing a matt varnish can be tricky.  It may at times be difficult to achieve an even, consistent appearance.

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