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Posted

Hi, my name is Alexa and I am new. I am in my mid 30s, currently live in Norway, and I am very interested in the Heroic Age of Antarctic (and Arctic) exploration. I know nothing about sailing, boats, or woodworking. In fact, this is why I am interested in models, when I read about Nansen, Amundsen, Scott, and Shackleton, I want to understand more.

I started thinking about models a year ago when I saw that I could buy a kit of my favorite ship, Fram. I came to the forums a bit, saw how long it takes, how many people give up, and felt discouraged. Then Fram was heavily discounted and I got it for myself for Christmas. How could I say no? It's the OcCre one, including paint and lights.

I saw that everyone recommended starting with a quicker, easier model, and since I did not want to ruin Fram (my beloved), I ordered the cheapest (and cutest) model I could find on Amazon. I now think it's a knockoff, but it did the job. You can see it bellow. 

Here is what I learned. Hope you will find this amusing.

  1. Terrible instructions. They actually made me feel better, because it felt acceptable to make mistakes, since it was impossible to get it right with no experience. I did research on the internet a bit, but after a few weeks I got into a bad loop of not being able to start because I did not know enough, I had no tools, no space. Hence why I pushed through and decided to just go for it and accept the mistakes. Done is better than perfect (for the Amazon model. Fram will, of course, be the very definition of perfection, right?).
  2. I was too eager to paint. I wanted to paint everything, all the time, even before gluing. Sometimes I did. Watercolor was not ideal. Why did I watercolor the planks too? Maybe I should mention my main hobby is painting.
  3. I did not measure the angles for the hull, had no tools, and hoped my eye is good enough. Let’s say the final shape is very unique and twisted. This created a lot of problems that I had to fix, and I am glad I noticed and understood them (after the fact).
  4. For some reason, I started with superglue. I did not have clamps yet and was trying to work fast. I learned to slow down. I ruined a lot of small details too and had to remake them from scratch.
  5. Planking was an experience. I could not, for the love of any god, make it nice, clean, and without holes. Maybe not enough water? Planks not flexible enough? I filled everything with crack filler, sanded it a million times, and added paint (acrylic this time). At least it has no holes now. I am sure worse ships can still float.
  6. Planking again. How do people hold the planks? I did not have little nails, and the small pins I used splintered the planks badly. Maybe it was too small. I need far more research here. I tried rubber bands; they also got glued to the model and were hard to remove. Later, I used superglue in places to keep it down when I could find no other solution. The model is probably 10% superglue, if I am honest. My fingers are 40% superglue.
  7. I added many details myself. Rope holding the elements, metal paint. I painted the interior of the cabin even though I know nobody will see it. It was my favorite part. I could do this forever.
  8. No sails. The instructions were so bad that I could not even understand how to start. I might still try, after more research.

I did not record how long it took, but probably a good few days (weeks?) of continuous work. It was a fun experiment in problem solving and learning new skills. I now understand the tutorials better, and I hope I am slightly better equipped for the real deal. I also have more tools, and best of all, I am still interested in starting Fram. I don't know if I will ever finish, but listening to an audiobook and working on the model was quite fun. Even if I lose interest by summer, I think half a model is better than just browsing the net.

So hello everyone! I would love to hear silly (or not so silly) mistakes you did and how you fixed them! I struggle with instructions a bit, since I would love a bit more detail about the "why," so all my research is taking a long time and keeping me from starting.

Model 1.jpeg

Posted

Welcome Alexa and well done on your first model! As for the planking question, I used pins that came with the kit on my Occre build and didn't have too much splinting, but pre-bending your planks might be enough to not have to use pins at all. Would highly recommend the planking tutorials by Chuck here on the forum. 

Also, side note, you should watch the show "Terror" (or read the book) it seems right up your alley. I'll keep an eye out for your build log of the Frame:)

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