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  • rtfoe
    SMF Supporters
    • Apr 2018
    • 9088

    #61
    Thank you for the great replies fellas.

    Originally posted by Jim R
    Hi Richard
    Wonderful, realistic fruit. Very inventive ideas.
    Sorry about your battle scars from the puss cat. I'm a dog person myself. Dogs are much slower and you get more warning - cats are just lightning fast with razor claws.
    Jim
    Imagine if you're confronted with a tiger...oh boy. They say they're just as fast.

    Originally posted by GerryW
    Some great work in those, nice to know that there are natural/free items that work for things (I'm still at the 'moss and bark' stage!)
    Nature can be quite helpful if you think differently and bring it down to scale.

    Originally posted by Tim Marlow
    That is superb modelling. You have a great eye for repurposing as well...
    Better than having an eye for women...so far SWMBO hasn't slapped me in the back of my head and asked that I put my eyes back into their sockets. :tears-of-joy:

    Originally posted by Neil Merryweather
    Outstanding stuff Richard, truly inspiring!
    I hope it has done its trick and is useful.

    Cheers,
    Richard

    Comment

    • rtfoe
      SMF Supporters
      • Apr 2018
      • 9088

      #62
      Okay here is the Asian king of fruits. There is a variety called Musang King which can fetch between 50 to 100 ringgit a kilo for the whole fruit. If you're lucky it will have a few compartments with a number of fruit. You also have the Siamese and Malaysian variant and the Malaysian one is the most sought after for its flavour. Below are some images of the real thing.

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      This one is taken in Hong Kong...

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      These are are taken at roadside stalls along the trunk roads during its fruiting season.
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      I had trouble at first to find a suitable natural source to replicate the fruit. Casuarina seeds were too big but I stumbled upon papaya seeds when their membrane was peeled had spiky hair that dried hard and kept its shape. The size would be about the local wild durians which suited the time frame as cultivated durians weren't developed yet and were much bigger.

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      Stuck with a copper wire for the stalk painted green with some highlights solved my durian problem. I got some balsa and made up the wooden stand.

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      Some paint and dry brushed highlights and washes finished the weathered wood effect.

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      These images show the copper wire inserted prior to cutting them to the right length.

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      Placed in front in pride of place as it is a crowd puller. Incidentally I made plums with the use of some round spice seeds...can't remember if they were oregano seeds. The large melon is just two part putty shaped with a dimple at two ends and a copper wire and painted green.

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      That ends the fruit fair. :smiling2:

      Cheers,
      Richard

      Comment

      • rtfoe
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 9088

        #63
        No comment on the fruit I see...has anyone tried it? Some ex-servicemen to Malaya may have come across it. :tears-of-joy:...and probably regretted or loved it.

        Cheers,
        Richard

        Comment

        • GerryW
          • Feb 2021
          • 1757

          #64
          Originally posted by rtfoe
          No comment on the fruit I see...has anyone tried it? Some ex-servicemen to Malaya may have come across it. :tears-of-joy:...and probably regretted or loved it.

          Cheers,
          Richard
          I don't think that I've heard of it - but somewhere in the back of my mind, there's something about a 'vomit fruit'? :thinking:

          Comment

          • GerryW
            • Feb 2021
            • 1757

            #65
            Not 'vomit fruit' - that's 'morinda'

            Comment

            • rtfoe
              SMF Supporters
              • Apr 2018
              • 9088

              #66
              It's the smelly fruit and is one of the fruit banned in Hotel premises. The other is mangosteen for its hard to remove sap that stains fabric.

              Cheers,
              Richard

              Comment

              • rtfoe
                SMF Supporters
                • Apr 2018
                • 9088

                #67
                Originally posted by GerryW
                Not 'vomit fruit' - that's 'morinda'
                My neighbour has a Morinda tree...always wondered if the fruit was edible. Haven't had the chance to smell the ones that have ripened and fallen to the road... vomit you say??

                Cheers,
                Richard

                Comment

                • GerryW
                  • Feb 2021
                  • 1757

                  #68
                  Originally posted by rtfoe
                  My neighbour has a Morinda tree...always wondered if the fruit was edible. Haven't had the chance to smell the ones that have ripened and fallen to the road... vomit you say??

                  Cheers,
                  Richard
                  Apparently - never seen any.

                  Comment

                  • rtfoe
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Apr 2018
                    • 9088

                    #69
                    Okay...let's give the telephone pole some attention.
                    Not every phone pole is alike through the different time periods and in 1975 the poles were cylindrical rather than the modern hexagonal ones we have now. I was lucky that I remembered the poles near my old Primary school were still using the old poles so I took some snapshots for reference.

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                    Man I wouldn't want to service that tangle of wires...

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                    With those set of pictures I set about slicing and cutting plastic rods and angle beams plus some Italeri rails and conductors.

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                    I used a transparent tubing from Tamiya to add the telescoped bottom length of the pole.

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                    I made the resistor panel box with two pieces of thick plastic beams and made the top and bottom lip with thin sheet styrene.

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                    Foot ladders strips were thin styrene sheets wrapped round the pole and pinched at the ends and glued. Sliced styrene rod was used for bolt heads.

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                    Painted the assembly with black and silver paint and the conductors in off white.

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                    More to come on the wiring...

                    Cheers,
                    Richard

                    Comment

                    • GerryW
                      • Feb 2021
                      • 1757

                      #70
                      Another masterclass going! :thumb2:

                      Comment

                      • Lee Drennen
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 7711

                        #71
                        Richard. I like the storm drain and the fruit stand don’t cut your self short on the fruit they look good.

                        Comment

                        • rtfoe
                          SMF Supporters
                          • Apr 2018
                          • 9088

                          #72
                          Thanks Gerry and Lee,
                          I haven't been classed as that at all but appreciate the compliment. With the kind of rainfall we get here storm drains are almost everywhere. After all that searching and scratching MiniArt comes up with a fruit stall kit 14 years later with some neat fruit but no Durian. :tears-of-joy:

                          Cheers,
                          Richard

                          Comment

                          • GerryW
                            • Feb 2021
                            • 1757

                            #73
                            It's the incredible details that are created out of nothing that sets builds like this in the 'master' group in my mind.

                            Comment

                            • JR
                              • May 2015
                              • 18273

                              #74
                              Richard great work, along with the way you have tackled the fruit the electric poles are superb.

                              Comment

                              • rtfoe
                                SMF Supporters
                                • Apr 2018
                                • 9088

                                #75
                                Thanks for the acknowledgement Gerry, and thanks John, your bunker busting work is just as good, I just want to dive into the snow.

                                Now let me see...the groundwork is done, the doggies have their own post so is the Honda, the banana tree is done, the fruits and telephone pole is done so what next...? Hmmmm...accessories, figgies, landrover?

                                Cheers,
                                Richard

                                Comment

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