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Models for my 5yr old Daugher???

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  • Guest

    #1

    Models for my 5yr old Daugher???

    Hi guys,


    As I near the completion of my first build :





    (Updates due- laptop fried itself the other week)


    My Daugher has been wanting to join in. Yesterday we went to wonderland in Edinburgh to see what was available. She wanted to glue and paint so it had to be a proper kit albeit a cheap and easy one, (Airfix sprung to mind). Sure enough they had lots of reduced starter kits but nothing, as I suspected, that would be suitable for a bit of a girly girl.


    After dragging her away from the Princess and Fairy moulded figures she eventually chose this:


    [GALLERY=media, 8286]IMG_20150411_202420 by dougie posted Apr 12, 2015 at 10:31 AM[/GALLERY]


    She is very happy to be building the cars (both for her) but I wondered if anyone had come across anything that may be more suited to a young girl.


    I may add that she does have (completely off her own back) a fixation with Warhammer stuff but we won't go there yet!


    Cheers Guys
  • PaulTRose
    SMF Supporters
    • Jun 2013
    • 6473
    • Paul
    • Tattooine

    #2
    see if she likes Gundam's........can be pricey in the uk but easy to paint and put together and have the attraction that they are 'posable'


    quite difficult thinking of stuff for girls................airfix tried a very long time ago with stuff like the show jumper and animals, never caught on
    Per Ardua

    We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no ones been

    Comment

    • Guest

      #3
      I think that is youngsters (suppose like grown men really) they like to glue and paint.


      I would have said Dougie as simple as possible mainly as young people see the next thing before they have finished the present what ever they are doing.


      I was surprised at how some can read instructions other clueless. 4 grandsons and the brightest of the bunch has difficulty reading the plans and instructions. The best at it is the one not so bright. Sounds heartless that but it is not just the fact as I love them all as I do my own sons and daughters.


      Laurie

      Comment

      • Guest

        #4
        Spacial awareness and visualizing the plans can use different thought processes I guess Laurie. I'm good at that but I can't add or subtract to save my life, hence I'm an offshore installation tech and not a design engineer (having not enjoyed uni) although I was good at cad, I don't want to be stuck infront of the pc all day haha I loved hand draughting. There most be a creative streak in that one grandson too. He will be the one who likes to get hands on probably And I'm sure you will do your but to help him flourish there being helpful and insightful as you are


        Beowulf


        Not a bad shout, I actually have shown her some before and she loves robots. We saw some gundam in Edinburgh yesterday in a newish shop beside wonderland models but she had walked miles by then and had her fill. Maybe I will ask again after we finish the 2 rally cars I have for her, I'm sure that suggestion is just the ticket.


        Cheers guys

        Comment

        • Guest

          #5
          Originally posted by \
          (having not enjoyed uni)
          You do not have to go to uni. Dougie. I went to night school and learnt in house during the day. In my opinion the best training you can get. We took on young budding architects who had trained for four or five years and who came to us as on a secondment who did not know a brick from a lump of concrete. Exaggerated of course but what kind of training is that I used to wonder. My father was a carpenter and I went with him on school holidays and Saturdays when he was working on house and office building construction. I then learnt to think in three dimensions when later laying down in two dimensions on a piece of paper. Not the other way around.


          Model making is a great way of thinking in 3 dimensions. One of the most difficult things for the brain to get it's head around (especially as the brain is in the head ).


          Laurie

          Comment

          • Guest

            #6
            My brain may not be In my head haha.


            I will get to read and problem solve more hydraulic pneumatic circuits hopefully soon when we get our new kit hired out. I like doing that as my brain lies dormant with most of my work atm.


            It's nice to hear that about the trainees, I've worked with a lot of people who make lives very difficult for people with the mental skills but not the hands on experience and I loathe that attitude lol

            Comment

            • PaulTRose
              SMF Supporters
              • Jun 2013
              • 6473
              • Paul
              • Tattooine

              #7
              i work in Quality Assurance in engineering......ive had people smirk when ive mentioned that im a model maker, had someone say what a stupid hobby and it wasnt of any value


              i replied that it actually helped with my job


              problem solving and countermeasure......hand/eye coordination.....tool usage/dexterity......ability to follow plans but still think outside the box....encourages patience


              i then asked him what his hobby was...........the reply?........football....watching, not playing!!


              laurie.....once had a new engineer join the company straight from uni.......this guy was spending his first week visiting every department to see what they did....was shadowing me when i was measuring some parts and i asked if he wanted a go........gave him some parts and a vernier caliper.....then i had to teach him how to use the vernier!!!!!.....and it was a digital one!! .....didnt know how to use a micrometer either..........and this is the future of the industry o_O.......and it really annoyed me since as an engineer he was at least on half as much again as me
              Per Ardua

              We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no ones been

              Comment

              • Guest

                #8
                Originally posted by \
                ..ive had people smirk when ive mentioned that im a model maker,
                I have had that Paul. A friend of my daughter in law in 6 weeks time (just had to get that in) the change in attitude (he is a commercial artist) when I mentioned making plastic models. That was until I showed what you could do. He will be over for the wedding and will have great pride in showing him all that we can all do.


                Also add Paul that enjoyment of working through a model. Trying different methods of achieving what you want. A better way than spending your life watching TV all the time. Crazy but I go to bed thinking what am I going to tomorrow. How am i going to approach it and what will it all look like. Also to be honest what are all the members here are going to think of it when it is finished.


                Laurie

                Comment

                • zuludog
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Mar 2015
                  • 239

                  #9
                  I think Airfix used to do historic figures, and birds, but I can't seem to find them now. However, they do Wallace and Gromit kits; I've found them on Wonderland models website.


                  Miniart models do 1/16 historical figures, also from Wonderland, or go to www.miniart-models.com


                  I think there are also DR Who kits by Airfix, but I haven't found them


                  I've searched Kingkit's website and found a few odds & ends, including farmyard animals


                  Try some of the fantasy figures or wargaming things that are not too extreme and violent


                  Work towards making her own doll's house; a farmyard, including a tractor and a Land Rover; a street scene, with cars, people, street furniture, & a post box? See what the railway accessories come up with; or a train anyway? At her level it wouldn't really matter if you mixed 1/72 & 1/76


                  A kit of your car?


                  there are a variety of snap together, beginner's, and starter kits around, but you'll probably have to search for them


                  an opportunity to start from an early age to teach her how to use tools, glue, paint, and to care for them. Would be more instructive? if she was allowed to have her own set of tools

                  Comment

                  • rickoshea52
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Dec 2011
                    • 4076
                    • Rick

                    #10
                    Originally posted by \
                    i work in Quality Assurance in engineering......ive had people smirk when ive mentioned that im a model maker, had someone say what a stupid hobby and it wasnt of any value
                    i replied that it actually helped with my job


                    problem solving and countermeasure......hand/eye coordination.....tool usage/dexterity......ability to follow plans but still think outside the box....encourages patience


                    i then asked him what his hobby was...........the reply?........football....watching, not playing!!


                    laurie.....once had a new engineer join the company straight from uni.......this guy was spending his first week visiting every department to see what they did....was shadowing me when i was measuring some parts and i asked if he wanted a go........gave him some parts and a vernier caliper.....then i had to teach him how to use the vernier!!!!!.....and it was a digital one!! .....didnt know how to use a micrometer either..........and this is the future of the industry o_O.......and it really annoyed me since as an engineer he was at least on half as much again as me
                    It never ceases to amaze me how some people, who have the brains the size of a planet, cannot use something as simple as a spanner let alone a micrometer.
                    On the bench: Airfix 1/48 Sea King HC4, Revell 1/24 Trabant.
                    Coming soon: Airfix 1/72 Phantom FGR2.
                    Just finished: Airfix 1/48 Stuka & Airfix 1/72 Sea King HC4.

                    Comment

                    • Guest

                      #11
                      Originally posted by \
                      It never ceases to amaze me how some people, who have the brains the size of a planet, cannot use something as simple as a spanner let alone a micrometer.
                      Yes I agree Rick and there are other sides to this.


                      Years ago Pauline and I were intrigued with the guy who lived at the bottom of our garden (lived in the house !). He was building a low brick wall on the edge of his patio.


                      Now Tom renovates cars vintage and after then. What a job he does. They are perfection personified.


                      Each day the bricks mounted up in dry form. Then one sunny day he arrives in the garden with a new level. He looked at it this way and that way upside down vertical but still could not fathom it all out. The brick wall was built without the aid of the level.


                      Tom was an interesting character. If he had a washing machine, for instance, which had conked out he dug a hole in the garden and buried it. One day the new hole being dug looked human size but no in went a motorcycle.


                      Just to add he did not bury his wife but I suspect the thought did occur to her that Tom should be buried with all his machines.


                      Laurie

                      Comment

                      • Guest

                        #12
                        Zuludog, thanks for that effort, I will look into those as soon as the cars are done.


                        Guys - in uni it was the same, the ones that were brighter than me academically most of them couldn't re build the mini moke we had and couldn't do the basic bench work either. Horses for courses though, they could do the maths and solve the problems!


                        That story Laurie about the guy burying stuff is brilliant! LOL


                        Cheers guys

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