As was entirely to be expected, Scale Model World was completely dominated by militaria - probably 90-95% of models at the show were military.
It got me thinking: why do tanks and planes so dominate our hobby?
There were plenty of ex-services folk at the show (as there are on here), and I get their (your) interest completely. But that doesn't account for the dominance across the board.
While I of course respect the service of the military (my dad, uncles and aunts all 'did their bit' during the second war), I have no interest in military modelling myself. But almost everyone else does! Why is that?
In trying to answer my own question, I came to the conclusion it's historic. Obviously, shortly after WWII there was huge interest in all things military - war comics, war films, toy soldiers and playing at war in the primary school playground. And plastic modelling came to the fore at about that time, so it made commercial sense to produce lots of military kits.
Once the emphasis was on militaria, inertia ensured it stay that way. And so it continues to this day. That's the only way I can explain it to myself.
You might think that, despite my lack of interest, militaria is intrinsically fascinating. And so it is, I'm sure. But so are cars, bikes, trucks, buildings and all the other stuff that you can make from plastic kits - but they don't dominate in the way militaria does.
What's your take?
It got me thinking: why do tanks and planes so dominate our hobby?
There were plenty of ex-services folk at the show (as there are on here), and I get their (your) interest completely. But that doesn't account for the dominance across the board.
While I of course respect the service of the military (my dad, uncles and aunts all 'did their bit' during the second war), I have no interest in military modelling myself. But almost everyone else does! Why is that?
In trying to answer my own question, I came to the conclusion it's historic. Obviously, shortly after WWII there was huge interest in all things military - war comics, war films, toy soldiers and playing at war in the primary school playground. And plastic modelling came to the fore at about that time, so it made commercial sense to produce lots of military kits.
Once the emphasis was on militaria, inertia ensured it stay that way. And so it continues to this day. That's the only way I can explain it to myself.
You might think that, despite my lack of interest, militaria is intrinsically fascinating. And so it is, I'm sure. But so are cars, bikes, trucks, buildings and all the other stuff that you can make from plastic kits - but they don't dominate in the way militaria does.
What's your take?
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