Just like my Severn Lifeboat, I'm going to try and do a potted history of the whaler's life in a trilogy of builds.
This is part 1....The harbour. I had but the roughest of ideas what to aim for, so here is the build, warts and all!
I've photo'd up to this stage in the original whaler thread, so I'll just post this image as a 'where up to' for the harbour construction.
Here's the happy accident I mentioned in the other thread. This is just the machined edge of the scrap polystyrene packaging. See how with just one wash it has produced a great looking harbour wall. With a bit more work, it could look quite nice......However! More in a mo'.
Something didn't look right and was bugging me. Then it hit me, the harbour wall was a bit too high. The whaler cutters were nearly touching the quayside. So I ripped the whole lot off and re-did the thing reducing the height. I also decided there was too much open water, so whilst I was wrecking the wall, I also cut down the size of the base to a better proportion.
Moral...never be afraid to tear your diorama apart. If it don't look right - it aint right.....
I wasn't sure what the quayside surface was at the time. I found out it was sometimes a mixture of cobbles and just rough, hard ground. So this is what I've gone for.
To get the scale cobbles something like I had to make them 1mm square. This I did by gently scribing the lines onto my trusty polystyrene pizza base with my knife, using a steel rule as a guide....Never use a plastic rule - Yes you have!
The cobbled road.
Here are the cobbles after the first coat of paint. They have turned out o.k., nice and rough and well used!
To break things up a bit, I've decided to make a sort of jetty cum landing stage for smaller craft. Here is the woodwork scribed to look like random boarding. The scale is the same as the whaler's deck planking - about 1/16" in old money. Slightly wider than the cobbles.....
The jetty In position. The planking lines are straight, it's the photo that's made them look bent!
The cobbles in position.
Build so far. Note the lowered harbour wall and the cut down base area.
I really must do something about the awful colour of the water. Still it's only a base coat which I sealed with pva by the way.
I've ordered some diddy figures for this. They are about 8mm high, so once I have them I can start getting ideas for the quayside.
Thanks for looking in on part 1 of the trilogy.
Cheers all,
Ron
This is part 1....The harbour. I had but the roughest of ideas what to aim for, so here is the build, warts and all!
I've photo'd up to this stage in the original whaler thread, so I'll just post this image as a 'where up to' for the harbour construction.
Here's the happy accident I mentioned in the other thread. This is just the machined edge of the scrap polystyrene packaging. See how with just one wash it has produced a great looking harbour wall. With a bit more work, it could look quite nice......However! More in a mo'.
Something didn't look right and was bugging me. Then it hit me, the harbour wall was a bit too high. The whaler cutters were nearly touching the quayside. So I ripped the whole lot off and re-did the thing reducing the height. I also decided there was too much open water, so whilst I was wrecking the wall, I also cut down the size of the base to a better proportion.
Moral...never be afraid to tear your diorama apart. If it don't look right - it aint right.....
I wasn't sure what the quayside surface was at the time. I found out it was sometimes a mixture of cobbles and just rough, hard ground. So this is what I've gone for.
To get the scale cobbles something like I had to make them 1mm square. This I did by gently scribing the lines onto my trusty polystyrene pizza base with my knife, using a steel rule as a guide....Never use a plastic rule - Yes you have!
The cobbled road.
Here are the cobbles after the first coat of paint. They have turned out o.k., nice and rough and well used!
To break things up a bit, I've decided to make a sort of jetty cum landing stage for smaller craft. Here is the woodwork scribed to look like random boarding. The scale is the same as the whaler's deck planking - about 1/16" in old money. Slightly wider than the cobbles.....
The jetty In position. The planking lines are straight, it's the photo that's made them look bent!
The cobbles in position.
Build so far. Note the lowered harbour wall and the cut down base area.
I really must do something about the awful colour of the water. Still it's only a base coat which I sealed with pva by the way.
I've ordered some diddy figures for this. They are about 8mm high, so once I have them I can start getting ideas for the quayside.
Thanks for looking in on part 1 of the trilogy.
Cheers all,
Ron
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