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Posted (edited)

@Arthur Goulart, thanks for the suggestion - in fact this issue had been increasingly been bugging me lately. 

 

My original plan was to have a colour scheme like this: 

Screenshot2024-09-17at19_51_16.png.967c5f5222069369450648219c357858.thumb.png.b88a23ebd845b3afa726cc0cbdcdda17.png

This looks like two thin wales, painted black, which was the norm up until at least the 1720's or 30's. But i have become aware of the way the wales were made later in the 18th century that you point out, and it makes it difficult to decide what to do colour wise.

 

As mentioned in this post, I am not sure I like the look if I continued the yellow cedar on the wale part. Though that may be the more realistic option! 

 

This is also the way the model of Gerner's Bornholm is depicted: 

IMG_6998.thumb.jpg.fa835616c5834cd65afdfdd057a36d11.jpg

 

However, I would like to keep as much of the hull natural wood as possible, so I would like to avoid painting the area between the wale and the waterline black, though this would probably be the most realistic.

 

Instead I looked towards another model, of the hukkert Amager:

 

IMG_6369.thumb.jpg.f89f3722fe538f5281e58d4f9f7c6f15.jpg

 

IMG_6370.thumb.jpg.da972e37da27d83091003f7c790f1ecb.jpg

 

This shows the black double wale, it is a ship by Krabbe like Christiania and the original drawing shows the same wale, blended into the planking: 

39523076.thumb.jpeg.2e5676ad82a43e31e2cb2fe0b3e70abf.jpeg

 

But I admit that I am not being consistent here, and that balancing the historical accuracy with the wish to show as much wood as possible is getting me into trouble! 

 

I am seeing a number of options here:

 

1) continue as planned, two thin wales painted black. It will look good, but will not be accurate for the time period - a bit of a pitty!

 

2) add three wale stakes in pear and blend it into the hull, no black paint at all. I think this may look a bit unfinished? And it might be difficult to get a nice transition when blending the lower part - I could leave a smaller ridge there as an easier transition.

 

3) add two or 3 yellow ceder and one pear plank as wale, and blend it into the hull. This would have the pear represent the part that is painted black, between the wale on many several depictions, incl. the Bornholm model.

 

4) build the whale from yellow cedar, blend it into the hull, and paint the area between the main wale snd waterline black. This is probably the most realistic, but it paints over the nicest part of the pear hull planking 😅! And this is what I wanted to avoid!

 

It might have been better if I had planked the upper part either entirely in pear or yellow cedar, but I am not ripping it off now! I will have to find a solution based on wale planking and painting.

 

Any suggestions, both on opinions on the above, or on other suggestions for a solution, would be much appreciated!

 

 

 

Edited by TJM
Posted (edited)

TJM,

You're right.

 

I had overlooked the posts about the black starting under the wales, but there is substancial evidence it did, specially when comparing Søe Ridderen's painted depiction you showed a couple times already on the topic with the ship's sheer plan, as you've noted too.

image.thumb.jpeg.8e1e05f34d69ce49fa00d1f43575e8d1.jpeg

Furthermore, take a look at this illustration:

 

image.thumb.jpeg.1a7bbd581789d0a3bedfb024404d36b3.jpeg

Doqven, Chistiansborg, BlaacHejeren, and Falster, all show the outline of the step of the upper wale, and the black portion, which follows the contour of the outlined step. That shows both awareness of the naval painting pratices of his time and intention to reproduce them by the depiction's author. And on Friederich et Lovise and on Neptunes, on which the wales were seemingly not blended with the hull, the black starts even lower.

 

Grant it, these are earlier examples than Christiania, but, that's some further evidence to think about.

 

Best regards,

Arthur.

Edited by Arthur Goulart
Posted (edited)

I think this contemporary model of Fyen (1736) shows how it would have been. Even if it is some 40 years earlier than Christiania:

 

IMG_6340.thumb.jpg.1554faaaa2700f2025967630bba17f08.jpg

 

IMG_6341.thumb.jpg.d1a11a99eb77e2a909fc8d5fa5539751.jpg

 

We know that the ships were not painted between the upper decoration and the lower wale until sometime in Gerner's period, so after Christiania was built - I did not know this when I decided to emulate the painted yellow band with the cedar. This is why I am now considering making it the main 'wood' colour for the hull instead, by using it for the wale as well.

Edited by TJM
Posted (edited)

Interestingly, as well, on Fyen's model the black goes up the wales, which makes sense. On Fyen's case, if the black was restricted to under the wales, it would be a thin, odd looking, section. Now, analysing it with that in mind, Falster, unlike the one deckers on the image I posted above, does not show the black outlined upper wale strake edge, as to suggest Falster is represented with the same scheme we see on Fyen. So, to summarize the conclusions from these few evidences: for frigates and smaller vessels, as the wales were relatively higher to the waterline, the black ended just below the wales, while for ships of more decks, the lower wales would too be painted black. Makes sense to me.

 

And, TJM, you can always say that the model represents Christiania later in her career, by then she would've been yellow. You've hooked my interest though, why did you come to the conclusion that the yellow came sometime in Gerner's period, not before?

Edited by Arthur Goulart
Posted (edited)
28 minutes ago, Arthur Goulart said:

Interestingly, as well, on Fyen's model the black goes up the wales, which makes sense. On Fyen's case, if the black was restricted to under the wales, it would be a thin, odd looking, section. Now, analysing it with that in mind, Falster, unlike the one deckers on the image I posted above, does not show the black outlined upper wale strake edge, as to suggest Falster is represented with the same scheme we see on Fyen. So, to summarize the conclusions from these few evidences: for frigates and smaller vessels, as the wales were relatively higher to the waterline, the black ended just below the wales, while for ships of more decks, the lower wales would too be painted black. Makes sense to me.

 

And, TJM, you can always say that the model represents Christiania later in her career, by then she would've been yellow. You've hooked my interest, though, why did you come to the conclusion that the yellow came sometime in Gerner's period, not before?

 

Yes, this is also what I conclude based on the evidence I have seen so far. And yes, no matter what, this build will not be a truly faithful representation of Christiania - it cannot be with me adapting the Sphinx kit. All of the deck furnishings will be 1:1 the Sphinx setup. So I guess I can take the liberties I want, but I still have to decide what I prefer 😅

 

The comment about the painting of the ships comes from Danske Orlogsskibe 1690-1860 (a fantastic book!):

IMG20260107205003.thumb.jpg.b4c50ef60b44a9e5d15d1fe0e660983f.jpg

 

This translates to:

 

In Gerner’s period, the painting of ships was introduced in the Danish navy. This came about almost through a private initiative, as the commander of Sophia Frederica in 1781, A. F. Moltke (1748–1820), at his own expense had his ship painted. The following year, the commander of the Indfødsretten, in connection with sailing to the Mediterranean, requested permission to do the same. The commander of Holmen had now come to the conclusion that painting was more preservative than the ordinary tallowing that had previously been used, and therefore had the painting of all Danish ships of the line carried out.¹¹

 

Previously, the ships had been “blacked” with a mixture of thin tar and soot, something that gave the ships a dark brown, almost blackish appearance. According to the regulations, this applied only to ships of the line, while the frigates were occasionally treated with pine pitch. When the blacking and pitch-coating took place, care was taken to cover tarpaulins over the “externally painted ship ornaments” in order to avoid blackening them.¹²

 

Reference 11 is to a text by F.C.Kaas published posthumously in 1843 who recounts the work that was done while he was Chief of Holmen (the Navy shipyard in Copenhagen) from 1781-92

 

Edited by TJM
Posted
19 hours ago, TJM said:

 

Yes, this is also what I conclude based on the evidence I have seen so far. And yes, no matter what, this build will not be a truly faithful representation of Christiania - it cannot be with me adapting the Sphinx kit. All of the deck furnishings will be 1:1 the Sphinx setup. So I guess I can take the liberties I want, but I still have to decide what I prefer 😅

 

The comment about the painting of the ships comes from Danske Orlogsskibe 1690-1860 (a fantastic book!):

IMG20260107205003.thumb.jpg.b4c50ef60b44a9e5d15d1fe0e660983f.jpg

 

This translates to:

 

In Gerner’s period, the painting of ships was introduced in the Danish navy. This came about almost through a private initiative, as the commander of Sophia Frederica in 1781, A. F. Moltke (1748–1820), at his own expense had his ship painted. The following year, the commander of the Indfødsretten, in connection with sailing to the Mediterranean, requested permission to do the same. The commander of Holmen had now come to the conclusion that painting was more preservative than the ordinary tallowing that had previously been used, and therefore had the painting of all Danish ships of the line carried out.¹¹

 

Previously, the ships had been “blacked” with a mixture of thin tar and soot, something that gave the ships a dark brown, almost blackish appearance. According to the regulations, this applied only to ships of the line, while the frigates were occasionally treated with pine pitch. When the blacking and pitch-coating took place, care was taken to cover tarpaulins over the “externally painted ship ornaments” in order to avoid blackening them.¹²

 

Reference 11 is to a text by F.C.Kaas published posthumously in 1843 who recounts the work that was done while he was Chief of Holmen (the Navy shipyard in Copenhagen) from 1781-92

 

That's awesome how it's possible to precise a date like that, thats more than a decade later from the adoption of paint by the British.

Also, just the other day, I was wondering what they finished the wood with when it was left unpainted, and, there it is! I'd be curious to know if there are photos of oak finished by those methods, so to see how it actually looked back then.

Thanks a lot, @TJM, you've taught me quite a lot these last interactions!

Posted

Snyggt jobb Thorbjörn.

Beautiful job Thorbjörn.

 

Please, visit our Facebook page!

 

Respectfully

 

Per aka Dr. Per@Therapy for Shipaholics 
593661798_Keepitreal-small.jpg.f8a2526a43b30479d4c1ffcf8b37175a.jpg

Finished: T37, BB Marie Jeanne - located on a shelf in Sweden, 18th Century Longboat, Winchelsea Capstan

Current: America by Constructo, Solö Ruff, USS Syren by MS, Bluenose by MS

Viking funeral: Harley almost a Harvey

Nautical Research Guild Member - 'Taint a hobby if you gotta hurry

Posted (edited)

Log entry 34 - planking completed!

 

And, just like that, the planking is complete!

 

I have done the first sanding pass, and it is mostly good, just a few spots that need a bit more:

 

IMG_20260118_160307.thumb.jpg.b84296d220b623b6cdc34f03df024a02.jpg

 

IMG_20260118_160244.thumb.jpg.360afb4f92e1268b35169c1b9e8a7075.jpg

 

IMG_20260118_160204.thumb.jpg.d89f2df53852b3de568d88d778242f86.jpg

 

IMG20260118141106.thumb.jpg.b898a6b53c260a3077ead4d9645e715a.jpg

 

This has taking me a very long time - almost 16 months since i began the second layer planking. Most of that time was obviously not spent on the model, ad I have been procrastinating by making Elben and drawing other ships i CAD, i have learned 3D printing and I have modelled the stern, the figurehead, a ship boat, many different cannons, etc. 

 

I am happy I pushed to the planking finish line, as I look very much forward to the next stage of the build. 

 

I am planning the wale planking and I am modelling the lower galleries - this is also why I have loosely fitted a reject stern print, as I need it to fit the lower gallery parts: 

IMG_20260118_160427.thumb.jpg.4d1ac7ab53812368e05ae10364b53f2b.jpg

 

IMG20260118141209.thumb.jpg.47ebec82355b2addaf85e4c8a898dffe.jpg

 

It needs a bit more work, but I will be filing the gap with filler and covering it with a decorative element.

 

And then the workspace got that cleaning 😅.

 

IMG_20260118_160354.thumb.jpg.467ef3c2464f96cbf30ae12b7a81fb8e.jpg

 

BR

TJM

Edited by TJM
Posted

Very nice result Thorbjørn!!

I remember my first build was an upcycled kit of victory models (HMS Unicorn) I learned so much in that time. Apart from the Syren projects, that was my last kit. It made me begin with scratch-projects. That will be your modelling-future as well I suppose.

Matthias

Posted

Thanks you so much, guys! Really appreciate the feedback 😃

 

2 hours ago, Beckmann said:

... I learned so much in that time. Apart from the Syren projects, that was my last kit. It made me begin with scratch-projects. That will be your modelling-future as well I suppose.

Matthias

 

Yes, I believe I will be going the scratch route for most future builds. But I still have much to learn from this kit, but I feel that every time I complete a phase, I would be able to use that on a scratch build - I did not have confidence like that after Flirt, I needed more experience.

 

I will be sorely tempted by Vanguard Models' future releases - while both Surprise and Agamemnon will be fantastic, I am really looking forward to see Chris do HMS Tyger. The ships from the period 1640-1690 has a wonderful aesthetic, I think, and I really want to see what a modern, full-blown VM treatment will look like. Luckily for me, that one is still a bit into the future!

 

I also have Amati's Revenge 1577 stacked away (also designed by Chris Watton) and I plan to do this some day, but not sure when.

Posted

Very nice finish!

 

Please, visit our Facebook page!

 

Respectfully

 

Per aka Dr. Per@Therapy for Shipaholics 
593661798_Keepitreal-small.jpg.f8a2526a43b30479d4c1ffcf8b37175a.jpg

Finished: T37, BB Marie Jeanne - located on a shelf in Sweden, 18th Century Longboat, Winchelsea Capstan

Current: America by Constructo, Solö Ruff, USS Syren by MS, Bluenose by MS

Viking funeral: Harley almost a Harvey

Nautical Research Guild Member - 'Taint a hobby if you gotta hurry

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