Andy's Modelmaking Misadventures

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Gwylan

Veteran
Location
All at sea⛵
It was raining yesterday

You say that. It was sunny where I am.
Do I have to check everything?
 
I may have got a little carried away buying parts for this project.

PXL_20250402_181940799.jpg
 
2025_03_11_emden_21.jpg


After the last burst of progress, I decided I wanted a few changes on the ship. The Poop deck, at the back of the ship, (& apparently the origin is exactly what you were thinking) was a bit too small, so I extended it by making the “cargo hatch” a bit smaller. This will allow me to extend the cabin a small amount, giving my characters more space for the purpose of engaging in fisticuffs or similar.

2025_03_11_emden_23.jpg


Of course, the deck now had a dirty great join right across it and I’d also forgotten to score in the planking, which is why it now sports this rather fetching green addition with cosmetic planks duly applied. The “snooker table” look is because, like a lot of my materials, the card was “strategically acquired” so it comes in all colours. At least this time it isn't covered in stars. Or unicorns.

2025_03_11_emden_27.jpg


To my surprise, fitting the decks wasn’t the endless trial and multitude of errors I’d expected, but it made up for that with the battle to cut straight slits in the bow and the stern for the mooring lines. It turns out that 2 1/2 mm of shellac-soaked card is pretty solid, and making consistent holes is difficult without a straight edge to cut against. Fortunately I was able to tidy the holes up to my usual standard of “I can hide it with weathering”, and I’m sure you won’t tell anyone about it, will you?
 

Punkawallah

Über Member
View attachment 767881

After the last burst of progress, I decided I wanted a few changes on the ship. The Poop deck, at the back of the ship, (& apparently the origin is exactly what you were thinking) was a bit too small, so I extended it by making the “cargo hatch” a bit smaller. This will allow me to extend the cabin a small amount, giving my characters more space for the purpose of engaging in fisticuffs or similar.

View attachment 767882

Of course, the deck now had a dirty great join right across it and I’d also forgotten to score in the planking, which is why it now sports this rather fetching green addition with cosmetic planks duly applied. The “snooker table” look is because, like a lot of my materials, the card was “strategically acquired” so it comes in all colours. At least this time it isn't covered in stars. Or unicorns.

View attachment 767883

To my surprise, fitting the decks wasn’t the endless trial and multitude of errors I’d expected, but it made up for that with the battle to cut straight slits in the bow and the stern for the mooring lines. It turns out that 2 1/2 mm of shellac-soaked card is pretty solid, and making consistent holes is difficult without a straight edge to cut against. Fortunately I was able to tidy the holes up to my usual standard of “I can hide it with weathering”, and I’m sure you won’t tell anyone about it, will you?

Don’t worry about the ragged holes - you can always cover them with ‘reinforcing plates’ ;-)
 

simongt

Guru
Location
Norwich
I've been an enthusiastic model maker for years, revived after a long break form childhood memories of Airfix kits. ^_^
But oddly, despite having about twenty kits awaiting assembly, I've gone off the boil and haven't done one in some time. :whistle:
Daresay the bug will bite again - ! :okay:
 
2025_03_11_emden_32.jpg


I said I’d probably go wandering off from my prototype at some point in the project, and here we are already. The ship I used as a starting point was built with an open bridge, but I’d read that at some time during her service life it had been enclosed. I imagine this was a relief for all concerned, so I decided to include this luxury feature.

2025_03_11_emden_30.jpg


Then I realised that as I’d designed the model, the steps up to the bridge would be too close to the top of the hull, meaning that anyone climbing them would be in danger of falling overboard. Given the choice of redesigning the hull and moving the steps back, I of course chose the more difficult option which after some swearing resulted in some rather complicated and almost identical steps, recessed into the hull.

2025_03_11_emden_31.jpg


Moving the steps back meant that the bridge now changed shape, making it more complex, not least because I wanted the front to be curved and because the roof had to be removable in case a future story involves stealing something from the bridge, or indeed stealing the ship.

2025_03_11_emden_32a.jpg


I got there in the end after emptying another bottle of superglue, but proper model makers of a sensitive nature probably shouldn’t look closely at some of the construction details or mention things like “right angles”.

I’ll just add clutter and weathering; it’ll be fine.
 
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