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"Sailing Memory" by thibaultron - Book Size Diorama


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Part 001

 

The next Book Nook type diorama I’m building is “Sailing Memory”. I figured a ship themed diorama would more fit with this forum. It is the least complex kit so far, but it does throw some “Curve Balls”, so follow along.

 

This first part will show the contents of the kit. Construction will start in Part 002.

 

The first thing to note, is that except for the book cover parts, none of the plywood sheets are printed on the back, like the other two kits were. For the most part, this is not a problem, but it does present problems for the chair and table, so far. Both are printed in a mahogany wood grained color, which was hard to match. As I like to paint the lasered edges, this was a problem, especially the chair which has raw wood on the inside of the arms. Also, this model has many more colors than the previous kits, and trying to come close to the right colors on the exposed ply edges, has been a challenge!

 

One thing of importance on this kit, about a year and a half ago I bought what I thought was this kit, for far less than the price of the other vendors. That was a huge mistake, and I should have known better! What I got was this kit, but with all the “details” printed on the insides of the covers, no 3D detailing at all, and the printing was fuzzy to boot! If you are getting this kit, find a vendor that shows the 3D detail up close, not just a shot of a completed kit!

 

I have already progressed in the construction, and while I took pictures as I went, there may be some gaps in this thread. I missed taking some pictures along the way. Normally I write the sections as I go, but life threw me some challenges the last few weeks, and I’m just now getting to the writeups.

 

Here are the contents of the kit.

 

This is the picture from the cover of the instructions of the completed kit. The box is just plain white cardboard, so no picture of that.

 

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The next two pictures are the outsides of the book covers/shell. I’ll show the printed insides when construction gets to that point. (Mostly because I forgot to take those photos when I was shooting these, and had already started construction, when I noticed their lack.)

 

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The next few pictures are of the remaining plywood sheets. Matching colors for all those edges will be fun, not! You can see the woodgrain detail printed on the sheets.

 

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This sheet has the back wall of the diorama, with the fancy window.

 

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This sheet has the cabinet front that the white translucent sheet glues to, in the lower right corner.

 

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The accessory bag has the LED assembly, and a sheet of glossy clear squares, that I think are to put over the small books in the model, after you build them. I probably will not use these, as I think the flat finish on the printed covers looks better.

 

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Here are the contents of the bag. The LED assembly, a ceiling fixture, A small sanding stick, and the folded sheet with the glossy squares. Another reason I don’t think I’ll use the squares, is that when I opened it to see what it was a couple of the squares stuck to my fingers, and were ruined.

 

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This is the printed paper sheet with several details. There are pictures for some picture frames, maps to be glued on, the book covers that will be glued to wooden book blanks, and a carpet for the floor (much more on the carpet later).

 

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Lastly this is a translucent sheet with two pieces to be glued on. The colored seascape is glued behind the ornate window at the back of the display, and the white blank goes behind the front of the cabinet that sits against the back wall.  This is similar to the Japanese style with paper “window” covering, like the old-style houses.

 

When the model is finished both of these will be backlit, for a nice effect. This may be a little incorrect for the cabinet, but it will still look good.

 

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I have jury duty next week so there will a gap in the writing of the thread.

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I just came across a picture of the cheap kit I mentioned in Part 001. The sad thing is, that it was only a little cheaper, but only showed a picture of a completed model of the one I'm building now! So a Chinese rip-off of a Chinese kit!

 

Notice the white LED module, which had no way to hook up a battery, and the solid amber rubber "thing", that I have no idea what it is for! There were no instructions.

 

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Posted (edited)

Part 002

 

The first part in the construction is building the floor/base of the diorama. The back of the floor is raised with three steps up to that level. Two blocks are glued to the underside of the rear of the raised floor, making sure the back edges of the parts are even with each other, as well as with the sides.

 

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The steps, like the rear blocks have two pieces that are glued with the back ends even with each other. There are, however, no locating marks on the underside of the raised floor to guide attaching the step block to the floor. I used my calipers to measure the depth of the step on the block, locked it and used then used the caliper to set the depth of the step block to the floor section. I measured radially at both ends and the middle. I also made sure the edges matched the floor.

 

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To make sure the floor fit properly in the case, I temporarily assembled the book cover pieces, and set the floor in.

 

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After taking the floor section back out, the next step in the instructions shows the carpet from the detail paper sheet being installed. The problem is the carpet is all one piece, and the instructions show it flowing continuously down the steps, which are curved! Simple for a real oriental rug, which will stretch somewhat, but a bit harder with a sheet of paper!

 

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I could not figure out how to do this, so decided to glue the carpet down on the raised section, then trim it off even with the curved edge. Mistake, I then realized that fitting the remaining sections down one piece at a time would be a nightmare!

 

 

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Luckily the carpet was printed on the sheet as two pieces, and the other matching section was intact. I scanned that piece in, and doubled it to create a new complete rug piece. I was totally unable to completely color match to the old piece, but I came close enough to remove the old section, and will use the print to replace the whole thing.

 

To print the carpet, I’m using a laser printer, as my inkjet one died. This presents a couple of problems. The first is that my printer has a maximum print resolution of 300X300 DPI, some of the detail will be lost. Not that the printing on the detail sheet was photo quality anyway, but it is still better than what my 20-year-old laser can do. For this use, and at a typical viewing distance, it will be “Good Enough”, though. The second problem is the toner on the paper has a semigloss finish, not flat like a real rug, and also flat like the other parts on the paper sheet. I lightly brushed on some Vallejo matt varnish, and that killed the shine.

 

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The problem still remained, of how to get the continuous piece to mold to the steps! I let the project sit a couple days, and then a light bulb went off in my head! I cut the plywood sheet the parts had come from, and there were two nice forming blocks that matched the step curves.

 

I tried it on the remaining piece of the original rug, and it pressed the carpet down nicely!

 

I started at the top step, clamped the thinner curved section down, then clamped the thicker one below it, also pressing the piece in.

 

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I then moved the two formers down, the thinner one to hold the paper in place where it had already been formed, and the thicker on to form the bottom step.

 

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I wanted to make sure the carpet piece would fit all the way the length of the lower floor, and it did. The picture below shows the finished test piece. There is a little bit of excess “rug” at the corners of the curves, but it is not as noticeable as raw paper edges would be.

 

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I don’t want to use regular paper stock for the carpet, but I’m out of the acid-free stock I had. I’ve ordered three more acid-free reams, and will wait for that to come in, before printing the final carpet piece. I was just going to order one ream, but one was ~$19, and three were ~$29, both with free shipping, so I ordered the three-ream bundle. That is more than I’m ever likely to use, for modeling, but at least I’ll never need to order any more.

 

The next steps are to build the back wall with the cabinet, and fancy window.

 

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Here are the three wood pieces, for that assembly.

 

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First you glue the translucent backgrounds to the back of the cabinet front, and window unit. I set the glue toward the outside edges, so no glue would mar the soon to be backlighted areas.

 

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The picture below shows the cabinet front with some light coming through.

 

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Next, I dry fit the parts, to see what it will look like. For now, I am leaving them this way. When final assembly starts, and I can make sure everything lines up correctly, I’ll glue them in place.

 

This pictures how the back wall as it will look like in the finished scene. There are details to glue to the top of the cabinet, but you get the idea.

 

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Edited by thibaultron
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Part 003

 

There are several different colors for the parts of this kit, as opposed to the previous two I built, so more matching was required for the edges of the pieces. I used a combination of colored pencils and Vallejo paint to hide the plywood edges. For small pieces like the picture frames, items on the shelves, etc., that had multicolored fine detailed surfaces, I used the pencils, to avoid marring the surface detail with misplaced brush strokes. The small items are going to have most of the edges hidden by other details or viewing angles anyway. For the larger items I used the paints.

 

Below is a picture of some of the early paint trials, using different shades of Vallejo Brown paints to find a close match. I tried Burnt Umber, Heavy Brown, Flat Brown, Chocolate Brown, Flat Earth, and Light Brown paints. The burnt Umber matched most of the edges best.

 

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Two items were a royal pain to match, the chair and table. They had a multi colored mahogany woodgrain pattern! The two pictures below show the parts for each. In the end I had to settle for a mix that somewhat matched, and did my best to keep the paint off the pre-colored areas. One saving grace is that the tabs that will be so prominently displayed on the table surface, will be hidden by a printed map.

 

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In the end I did a decent job on the edges and unprinted sides of the table, but ended up painting all but the printed area of the seat and the chair back. Most of the lower chair will be blocked by the table either directly, or by its shadow.

 

The paint mixture I ended up with was 10 drops of Chocolate Brown, mixed with 4 of Red. The brown was a little runny, and the red thick, so your results may vary. The red paint was the first one I’ve come across that was too thick, at first, to just use a mixing ball to “stir”. I had to remove the tip and stir it with the broken off end of a wood Q-Tip stick, as well as pulling the stick out and wiping the blob, on the side of the bottle. After getting it mixed this way, the ball then finished the mixing. This bottle came from the first set of paint I bought about 6 or 7 years ago, so the age may have been a factor. The blue that came out of the same set did not exhibit this problem though.

 

Here is a picture of the painted chair.

 

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And the completed set.

 

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The next part I built was the clock. It consists of two pieces the back with the dial printed on it, and the front.

 

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The edges of the completed piece were too complex for a pencil, so I used a brush and Burnt Umber to color it. I carefully wiped up the little bit of excess paint from the front. I should have painted the inside of the cutout for the dial, but did not think of that until after the two halves were already glued. I also painted the pendulum weight brass, as, what self-respecting Sailer would not keep his brass polished! In the end, this part is going to be mostly hidden by arches, but I will know its there. As a clock fan I wish it was more prudently displayed, but I had already glued the pictures in the designed prominent areas, before I discovered that the clock was going to be hidden.

 

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Next, I worked on the pictures. The best way I could think of attaching the printed pictures to the back of the frames, was to glue the frames directly to the sheet, and then remove the excess and carefully clean the many fine edges as best I could. If I had precut the pictures from the sheet, I did not think I could get them centered properly, without getting glue on the surface, of the print. This method took a lot of clean up, but I think it worked out better.

 

The picture below shows the first frame being glued on. The pencil marks are from my first trial to see if I could cut out the complex edge first, and then I decided the way, I ended up doing it was a better option.

 

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One mistake I made was not paying attention to the clearances between a frame and the pictures near it. For picture E21, when I glued the frame down, the frame partially obscured the print for E23. Luckily there was just a small gap left when I glued on the frame for E23, that is hidden by the viewing angle. After that mishap I cut out the individual pictures, leaving as much white surround as possible, and then glued the frames to the individual pictures.

 

The picture below shows the frames glued to the matching pictures.

 

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There is a smaller frame not shown in the photo above, that fits on s shelf, that I also glued up.

 

The next assembly is a shelving unit, that will hold some of the small items. It has the frame and shelves, with a two-layer bottom decoration. I cleaned up the parts, glued them together, and clamped everything as best I could. The next two pictures show the glued and clamped shelf.

 

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Here is the completed shelving unit before I painted the raw plywood edges and back surfaces of the vertical uprights.

 

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I used Burnt Umber to paint the surfaces.

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I next cleaned up the picture frame edges, with a hobby knife, files and sandpaper. This left the paper edge and sanded wood areas, which I colored with pencils., as show in the fuzzy pictures below, sorry.

 

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Then, I glued the pictures, clock, and some other decorations to the marked locations etched on the interior walls.

 

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Construction will continue in the next part. The acid free paper arrived today, so I can start working on installing the carpet, also.

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Excellent work.

 

OC.

Current builds  


28mm  Battle of Waterloo   attack on La Haye Saint   Diorama.

1/700  HMS Hood   Flyhawk   with  PE, Resin  and Wood Decking.

 

 

 

Completed works.

 

Dragon 1/700 HMS Edinburgh type 42 batch 3 Destroyer plastic.

HMS Warspite Academy 1/350 plastic kit and wem parts.

HMS Trafalgar Airfix 1/350 submarine  plastic.

Black Pearl  1/72  Revell   with  pirate crew.

Revell  1/48  Mosquito  B IV

Eduard  1/48  Spitfire IX

ICM    1/48   Seafire Mk.III   Special Conversion

1/48  Kinetic  Sea Harrier  FRS1

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Part 004

 

While using pencils to color the edges of the Victrola I broke the area of the neck of the trumpet, not all the way, but it was floppy. To fix it I added a bead of glue along the back of the area, and as added strengthening, I glued a sliver of paper to the back between the mouth of the trumpet and the base. After a couple rounds of adding more glue along those areas, the part is now quite strong. After the last layer set, I trimmed the pointed area of the paper off.

 

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My acid-free paper came a few days ago, and I eagerly loaded it into my laser printer, to print a new copy of the carpet! I ran the print, with a couple extra, and got a shock when I looked at the prints, they were in Black and White! What the h..l! Then I checked the printer, the magenta cartridge had just run out of toner! AAAAHHH!

 

Not immediately having the money for a new set of toners, (the others were also low), I dug the old prints I did on regular paper out, and sorted through them to find the best two. I took the slightly darker print, and proceeded to set the carpet down like in the trials, I ran in a previous part of the thread, this time gluing the sections down as I went. It went well until I got to the last area that was to go down on the lower level, it was crinkled a bit and bowed up in the middle. No problem, I just laid down glue over most of the area, and clamped it down, as shown below. Disaster! The glue had soaked into the paper, and it looked like the carpet had been flooded with water! I had glued the other areas at the edges only. Luckily, I had not let the glue fully dry, and with much effort, and a lot of strong language, I managed to get that section and the glue removed. I could not use Isopropyl Alcohol on it, as it affects whatever paint the manufacturer applied to the kit parts.

 

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I cut the carpet at the corner between the lower floor and the riser for the first step. This left the section on the riser loose, as I had only applied glue to the horizontal areas. I took the slightly lighter print and cut it a little longer than needed, the end of this extended past the front edge of the floor, and clamped it in place. I pressed it in place, with the curved sprue section I used to form the rest of the carpet, then ran a hobby knife down the curved corner. This gave me a guide, to trim the unneeded area off. I moved the sprue back a little and holding it down tightly, after making sure it was parallel to the front edge of the floor, I trimmed the extra off by running the knife down the sprue edge again. This gave me a good matching curved edge. I glued the new floor section down at just the edges, and now, no “water” stains. The two prints are almost the same color, and the difference is not noticeable. To secure the bottom edge of the riser, I held it in place and ran a bead of glue on the outside of the corner. There was a little of the floor showing at this joint after the glue dried, so I painted the corner with Vallejo Flat Earth, which closely matches the tan areas of the carpet.

 

Even if someone does notice the different shades of the two pieces, I will just say that Oriental Carpets are handmade, and even two “identical” carpets will vary a little due to the hand dying process! “That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.”

 

Here is a picture of the finished carpet.

 

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Below, is a picture of the small standing picture and frame, that I forgot to get went I took the picture of the hanging frames.

 

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I, next, assembled, glued, and clamped the right-hand cover and spine, to the base.

 

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Here it is after it dried. You can see the slight gap on the left-hand side of the carpet. Once painted, this disappeared.

 

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The next parts I assembled were the back wall area and the first arch. These were supposed to be assembled earlier, but I wanted to wait to glue them in when I had something to support them, in the correct orientation.

 

Before I glued them in, I installed the first LED (see the instructions below), the one that will backlight the window. It turns out the clear stickers are to be used as tape to hold the wires in place. I used one to hold this LED’s wires, and then additionally glued it in place, also.

 

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Here is a picture of the LED assembly. The short one at the bottom, is the one that is used here.

 

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This photo shows the LED taped and glued in place.

 

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The ceiling and first arch make up the rest of this sub-assembly. The picture, below, shows the installed parts. I did not glue the two legs of the arch to the floor. The cover is slightly warped, and the left side of the arch sticks up a little. The arch is captured by the floor and ceiling tabs, so it can float free at the bottom. There are two more arches that go in front of this one, so any gaps will be hidden. I hope everything will meet better when the other cover and the front piece are installed, and can counteract the warpage. If not, I will torque the whole assembly and add glue to hold it in the correct alignment.

 

In the picture you can see the gap on the left-hand arch leg.

 

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I wanted to see how the backlighting looked, so I set the left-hand cover in place and turned on the LEDs. The first shows the model with the interior dark, so I could get the whole effect. When the model is done, there will be two more LEDs lighting the interior. The second picture is with some overhead light added.

 

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I glued in the cabinet, and clamped the left side, so the bottom, sat firmly down on the floor. The instructions, would have had me gluing a set of books where the head of the clamp is. I’m glad I waited until this was in place.

 

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The next assembly, is a small semi-circular table. The instructions have a mistake, that I did not notice, until I went to paint the edges, while building this. In the picture of the instruction sheet, below, it clearly shows the upper level of the table, having both pieces with the printed surfaces pointed up. This unfortunately, leaves the raw wood side facing the interior of the assembly! I had to paint the underside, as well as the edges, to hide this. The table should be built with the printed side of this piece down.

 

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You can see the raw face in the picture below. It was “Fun” trying to get all the spindles in place while attaching them to the semi-circular ends, and that is one reason I missed the error. In any case, once everything was assembled, I use the edge of my ruler to line the top and bottom of the piece up.

 

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In the next Part I will be building some of the small details, including the books.

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Ron,

 

That would look really good in someone’s modeling library!

 

Nice work!  Looking forward to seeing how everything goes together!

Building: 1:64 HMS Revenge (Victory Models plans)

1:64 Cat Esther (17th Century Dutch Merchant Ships)
 

On the building slip: 1:72 French Ironclad Magenta (original shipyard plans)

 

On hold: 1:98 Mantua HMS Victory (kit bash), 1:96 Shipyard HMS Mercury

 

Favorite finished builds:  1:60 Sampang Good Fortune (Amati plans), 1:200 Orel Ironclad Solferino, 1:72 Schooner Hannah (Hahn plans), 1:72 Privateer Prince de Neufchatel (Chapelle plans), Model Shipways Sultana, Heller La Reale, Encore USS Olympia

 

Goal: Become better than I was yesterday

 

"The hardest part is deciding to try." - me

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Posted (edited)

Part 005

 

I tackled the books next. The kit supplies wood blanks and printed covers to be glued on them.

 

This picture shows the raw blanks, nine for small books, and two blanks for large ones.

 

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The printed covers are shown below, they are the E11 and E12 graphics.

 

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I started by sanding the edges of the blanks, to smooth off the holding tabs the laser left. I then rounded one long edge to represent the spine, and also to allow the cover to flow smoothly around those corners.

 

I trimmed the covers on one long edge and one short edge, leaving one completely trimmed corner Then, I separated each cover Leaving as much unprinted area as possible, to use as handles. The trimmed edges formed the end of a cover, and the base of the book.

 

I applied glue to the cover end edge, and placed the trimmed corner on the blank. I carefully bent the cover around the spine, to make sure everything was lined up, then unbent it, and set the books blank side down, and let the glue dry.

 

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After the glue was set, I applied glue to the opposite side of the blank, and the spine area. Then, I bent the cover around and held it in place for a few seconds, until the glue grabbed. I set the books back down, with the glued side down, to hold the cover in place, and let the glue fully dry.

 

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After the glue was dry, I trimmed the extra paper away, with a hobby knife, then gently sanded the edges to clean off any extra paper that was left.

 

This photo shows one of the completed small books.

 

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This picture shows a large and small book.

 

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The next steps are assembling some small details. The photo shows the instructions for some of these. The first is a trash can shaped map holder. The next panels show the crate, and the assembly of the top of a chest.

 

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These pictures show these details during assembly

 

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I painted the semi-circular table’s exposed areas.

 

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Next, came covering the map holder and chest. The number 8 graphic is the map holder cover, and 9 is for the top of the chest. When I went to cover the chest, the print is too short, to cover all of the top, from front to back! If my printer was working, I would have stretched the print, and printed another to use. I painted the exposed top to hide the raw wood, and will have to leave it at that.

 

There is another picture and frame, that is shown further on in the instructions. Graphic number 6 is the picture for that frame.

 

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This photo shows the picture, the covered chest, and the map holder, skinned. Later two of the graphics are rolled and glued in the map holder. I painted the top rim of the map holder, as I gouged the printed color, trimming the excess paper.

 

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There is a shelf that goes on the right wall, that will hold a few items. The next two photos are the basic shelf assembled.

 

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This shot is the shelf with two books and a lantern mounted. I painted the edges of the lantern handles and top black. I forgot about painting the base, before I glued it on. Thankfully the laser char is a close color, to the base.

 

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Edited by thibaultron
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Part 006

 

The front archway is the next section to assemble. It has a printed front wall with lattice work side walls in the opening, several individual arches to fill the top in, and a printed back wall.

 

This photo shows the lattice side walls and the parts that are layered to form the ceiling of the arch, glued to the front wall.

 

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In this picture the printed back wall has been glued on. The printing on this wall will never be seen, but it was nice that they added this detail.

 

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Once all the parts were glued. I set the assembly in the model, and clamped it, to hold all the pieces in alignment.

 

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This is what the finished assembly looks like in place. At this point it was not glued to the model, I have other parts to go in first.

 

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The details were added to the table, next. The top is covered in a map, which hides the exposed tab ends, a globe, an ink well and quill, and the two large books. I painted the edge of the quill off-white, used a gold-yellow pencil for the edges of the globe, and chocolate brown paint, for the globe frame.

 

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When the glue dried, I glued the chair and table into the back of the scene, as well as four upright, and one leaning book onto the top of the cabinet (one the left).

 

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The details were then added to the shelving unit, as well as the scroll work at the top of the shelves.

 

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Finally, three books were glued behind the picture frame.

 

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A part was glued in that serves to support one side of the ceiling, and space the top of the front arch.

 

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The ceiling over this section was assembled, next. It will span the area from the brown arch, to the back of the front of the model. The other two LEDs are attached to the underside of this to light the interior.

 

This ceiling will be glued in place, and has a hold down latch for the piece that covers the battery box.

 

The four parts of the ceiling are shown, below.

 

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The doughnut shaped ring, is glued to the underside of the ceiling as part of the latch assembly.

 

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To complete the ceiling, the “L” shaped part is pushed through the hole with the short leg positioned at the doughnut, and the handle is glued to the protruding section. The “L” and the handle must be free to turn in the hole. The LEDs are bent at 90 degrees and glued in place on the underside of the ceiling. To position the LED at the front, of the model, one of the extra book blanks is glued at the front. Care must be taken that the wires for the front LED run down the center of the part. There are notches in the tops of the arches these for them to run through.

 

I taped the wires in place, then glued them down. The wires that exit at the back will be twisted together to fit through the notch there.

 

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The battery cover is the next part to build, it is a simple piece. This is a decorated plywood sheet with a central hole, the fancy fixture is installed in the hole as a handle for the cover. The fixture is a flat pin that captures the washer and ring. The pin is pushed through the hole, and bent over on the back side.

 

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Part 7 will cover the completion of the model.

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Excellent work Ron.

 

OC.

Current builds  


28mm  Battle of Waterloo   attack on La Haye Saint   Diorama.

1/700  HMS Hood   Flyhawk   with  PE, Resin  and Wood Decking.

 

 

 

Completed works.

 

Dragon 1/700 HMS Edinburgh type 42 batch 3 Destroyer plastic.

HMS Warspite Academy 1/350 plastic kit and wem parts.

HMS Trafalgar Airfix 1/350 submarine  plastic.

Black Pearl  1/72  Revell   with  pirate crew.

Revell  1/48  Mosquito  B IV

Eduard  1/48  Spitfire IX

ICM    1/48   Seafire Mk.III   Special Conversion

1/48  Kinetic  Sea Harrier  FRS1

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Sailing Memories

 

Part 007

 

This is the completed right-hand wall of the model. The shelves have been added, and populated. The chest and crate are glued to the floor, and the table with the map holder installed. The last items are three drawings tacked to the wall over the table. You can also see the books added to the cabinet at the back of the display.

 

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This is the left-hand wall, before installation. Unlike I thought, the clock is indeed at the forefront of the diorama. I’m glad I took a little extra effort in painting it. The shelving unit is not glued in yet, I set it in the approximate location it will go. I glued it in after this wall was glued on. It fit tightly between the front panel and the foremost arch.

 

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I installed the front plate and left wall, clamping it while the glue set. This wall was even more warped than the other, and while all the lefthand sides of the arches were pulled down tight to the floor, the whole unit is slightly racked and the base is a bit wobblily. I may in the future use a piece of sand paper tapped to the workbench to sand the base flat.

 

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I glued the ceiling support onto the left wall, and used a ruler laid on the tops of the arches to insure it lined up with them.

 

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I glued the ceiling in place, with the battery door installed to make sure everything fit up top.

 

Here are pictures of the finished diorama, with the LEDs turned on.

 

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This picture was taken while the clamps were holding the ceiling down, until the glue dried. You can see how the warped walls have slightly racked the top. This will not be noticeable when on a shelf, at eye level. The battery cover at the back, was also sitting on a wire, and fit better when I fixed that.

 

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Here is a close up of the floor area.

 

 

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I like this one the best of the three I’ve done, even if it was the easiest to build. There is a lot of detail packed into the “room”. Taking time to paint, or color the raw edges really paid off for this model.

 

This will be the last Book Nook kit for a while, I’m going to turn to some railroad and Maritime models for a bit.

 

I had started on a 1/26th scale Airfix model of Stephenson’s Rocket a while back, but managed to damage it. I have another kit and want to finish that one. I have a companion piece to go with it. It is a static model of the Rocket and one of the original carriages used during its’ winning competition in 1829. The model is in 1/76th scale (British OO) mounted in a display case.

 

I already have a display case with three similar era American locomotive, and their cars, in HO scale. Those three are powered and can be run on a layout. For the train on the upper track, I cut and dyed HO scale crossties from basswood strips, and glued N scale rail to them. The lower trains are sitting on wood rails with painted on iron strap tops. This was the first type of rail used by the B&O Railroad in the 1830s. This type of rail was quite dangerous, as the iron strapping had a tendency to work harden, break loose from the wood portion, and curl up piercing the floors of the cars! Not a good thing, especially if it happed to be a passenger car! To save vertical space, and not block the view of the train on the upper level, I omitted the granite cross ties they used then. If you walk along the present right of way between Baltimore and Ellicott City, you can still find some of these stone ties discarded at the bottom of the fill, and others used to make small culverts under the present tracks. The car(s) attached to each loco are the type they actually pulled. These trains were put out by Bachmann several years ago. If I’m not mistaken, they all served on the B&O. I know that at least the upper one was, as the B&O museum has a working replica that the B&O built for a celebration of the Railroad it held, I think in 1900. I hope it survived the collapse of the roundhouse roof a couple of decades ago, caused by a large amount of snow that built up on it during a major storm.

 

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Also, when I was about 12, I got a kit of the Trevithik locomotive that came with a three-piece display case. I’ve had that loco ever since, and carefully packed it with each move I made. About 7 years ago, we had a couple renting a room from us, and while we were on vacation their 4-year-old got into it and the tender disappeared, as well as having one of the gears broken off! I have acquired another model of this loco (one without the case), and want to build it (with a better paint job), and reuse this case for it. The loco sitting on the case is a French Pacific type locomotive, also static.

 

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In the upper right corner, you can see a striped rag blanket (made from strips of old clothes ripped into strips that were then rolled and then used on a loom, using them as the left to right “Thread”.) that was made by my Great-Grandmother. Sometime around the turn of the last century.

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Very cool Ron!  You're getting very good at these!

Mike

 

Current Wooden builds:  Amati/Victory Pegasus  MS Charles W. Morgan  Euromodel La Renommèe  

 

Plastic builds:    SB2U-1 Vindicator 1/48  Five Star Yaeyama 1/700  Pit Road Asashio and Akashi 1/700 diorama  Walrus 1/48 and Albatross 1/700  Special Hobby Buffalo 1/32  Eduard Sikorsky JRS-1 1/72  IJN Notoro 1/700  Akitsu Maru 1/700

 

Completed builds :  Caldercraft Brig Badger   Amati Hannah - Ship in Bottle  Pit Road Hatsuzakura 1/700   Hasegawa Shimakaze 1:350

F4B-4 and P-6E 1/72  Accurate Miniatures F3F-1/F3F-2 1/48  Tamiya F4F-4 Wildcat built as FM-1 1/48  Special Hobby Buffalo 1/48

Citroen 2CV 1/24 - Airfix and Tamiya  Entex Morgan 3-wheeler 1/16

 

Terminated build:  HMS Lyme (based on Corel Unicorn)  

 

On the shelf:  Euromodel Friedrich Wilhelm zu Pferde; Caldercraft Victory; too many plastic ship, plane and car kits

 

Future potential scratch builds:  HMS Lyme (from NMM plans); Le Gros Ventre (from Ancre monographs), Dutch ship from Ab Hoving book, HMS Sussex from McCardle book, Philadelphia gunboat (Smithsonian plans)

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