The Ship Model Forum

The Ship Modelers Source
It is currently Fri Jun 20, 2025 5:21 am

All times are UTC - 6 hours [ DST ]




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 275 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14  Next
Author Message
PostPosted: Sun Dec 15, 2024 1:23 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2016 5:33 pm
Posts: 1952
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
When I have to finish my Turenne, this thread will by my bible.

Jim, the deck of Bretagne - was it really so grey even as wood (and depicted weathered) or this is just shadows of the sails making it look desaturated? It quite changed its appearance in some photos from the earlier images. May be just the angle of the photo.

Love the progress, I guess we will never truly appreciate how delicate this is unless we see it in person. Which is kind of a goal now on some event!

_________________
- @Shipific on IG
my gallery


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Mon Dec 16, 2024 12:29 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Thu Jun 23, 2005 3:47 pm
Posts: 435
This is mindblowingly high class work, Jim. I can but admire your skills, dedication, patience and self-control.

Thanks for sharing the images of your trip to get your Xmas tree with your Ford T - excellent, even though a bit nippy!

Cheers

Frank

_________________
AKA "Doc Bear" (a bear of very little brain ...)
VMF'06 - German Gamblers
Veritable Modelling Friends 2006, Germany


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Mon Dec 16, 2024 2:05 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Tue Sep 29, 2020 4:35 pm
Posts: 1881
Location: Bretagne, France
I'm impressed by the density of the rigging, which you've done brilliantly. If you zoom in very close on the photos, you can see the scale of the work and the amount of patience and dexterity needed to achieve such feats. Keep warm, Jim.Image

To drive a Ford T in winter, you need the right vintage equipment for the driver! :big_grin:

_________________
Pascal

•Battleship Bretagne 3D: https://vu.fr/FvCY
•SS Delphine 3D: https://vu.fr/NeuO
•SS Nomadic 3D: https://vu.fr/tAyL
•USS Nokomis 3D: https://vu.fr/kntC
•USS Pamanset 3D: https://vu.fr/jXGQ


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Mon Dec 16, 2024 9:45 am 
Offline

Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 10:24 am
Posts: 2579
Location: Belgium
Simply awe-inspiring! I'm loving every bit of this!

An appropriate quote from Donald McNarry's 'Ship models in miniature' from 1975, while describing his 64' to 1'' model of the Royal Charles:
'I have never the least doubt in my own mind that very small-scale models like this are of much greater worth than a similar model say, 16' - 1''. If the normal amount of detail is to be included it requires a great deal more care and skill to produce this and a totally different standard of work is involved.'


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 20, 2024 2:32 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 5:30 pm
Posts: 5568
Location: Nr Southampton England
Thank you Gentlemen for encouraging words--

progress is relentless, if slow

The French ships carried a lot of boats-- stowed on davits in a most innovative way !

Attachment:
zz gv0HiK4elwsXd9LA.jpg
zz gv0HiK4elwsXd9LA.jpg [ 1.02 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Attachment:
zz  2lqMXQPiZ7ZLGw1V.jpg
zz 2lqMXQPiZ7ZLGw1V.jpg [ 831.8 KiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Bretagne followed this pattern

Attachment:
zzz  boast sail.j..jpg
zzz boast sail.j..jpg [ 312.28 KiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Attachment:
zzzzboats pow.jpg
zzzzboats pow.jpg [ 392.97 KiB | Viewed 731 times ]


noteworthy is that covers were fitted to some of the boats when slung in davits

Attachment:
P1050296.jpg
P1050296.jpg [ 1.3 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


this would also add a bit of variety to the model;

The boats duly had covers made ( as in previous post) and were installed to the davits
( with a dot of ( thinned ) white glue for initial high 'grab' , followed up with CA drops

Attachment:
P1050319.jpg
P1050319.jpg [ 1.63 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


and tuned to be level with the sheer-line and the inner boat

These boast were strapped up in real life, black boats had black straps--

these fine models( Soldeferino and Gloire ) ( Musee de Marine-

-which illustrates it well

Attachment:
zzboats solferino.jpg
zzboats solferino.jpg [ 483.42 KiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Attachment:
zz num-gloire MG-1-0321-c.jpg
zz num-gloire MG-1-0321-c.jpg [ 327.34 KiB | Viewed 731 times ]




I made the straps with sprue--but before drawing sprue -the molten had a sideways ' swipe' on the card

( see me step by step)

here==> viewtopic.php?f=4&t=37536

then drawn with medium speed--this resulted in FLAT black sprue :cool_2: :big_grin:

This was attached inboard on the davit, (with Revell professional liquid glue) and left-


-thereafter a bit more - fresh-glue on the keel-
-which ensures a sharp kink as the strap passes under the boat--and then drawn up to terminate on the davit

Attachment:
P1050322.jpg
P1050322.jpg [ 1.26 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Onwards to anchors--

these were 3-D printed for me and are very good, however they were fragile to seperate...(!!)

Luckily I had plenty of them to end up with 4 anchors (!!!)






the ships had " skids frame" at the fwd shroud channels--discernible in the plans ( if you REALLY enlargef the plan !)

I made mine of PE

Attachment:
P1050315.jpg
P1050315.jpg [ 1.04 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


with a pile of fiddling , a few hours and copious swearing I had 4 anchors 'catted up '

In the ' black and white ' era--the anchors and ancillary equipment was painted so to not interrupt the flow of the black and white stripes!!!


Attachment:
P1050333.jpg
P1050333.jpg [ 1.54 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


before getting involved with head-sails I tuned my attention to bow-sprit netting. I was using Paint filter mesh

Attachment:
P1040987.jpg
P1040987.jpg [ 1.51 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


a template was made ( folded paper and test-fitted)


Attachment:
P1050304.jpg
P1050304.jpg [ 1.1 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


this was eventually cut out

Attachment:
P1050374.jpg
P1050374.jpg [ 1.35 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


and installed to the vessel
( all that is delicate and fiddly on a partially rigged bow-sprit !!)

Headsails... I made fresh ones--that were lighter--

Attachment:
P1050365.jpg
P1050365.jpg [ 1.24 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


these were installed with the vessel perpendicular to its usual stance

( nerve wracking !-one slip and all masts would be gone!!)

Attachment:
P1050356.jpg
P1050356.jpg [ 1.49 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Attachment:
P1050358.jpg
P1050358.jpg [ 1.31 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


This was done...

as they need to be not close-hauled ,
but rather as the ship is on a broad reach the headsails also need to be 'sheeted out '

To allow this to happen (and unload and preserve glue joints,)

the sails are ' propped out ' using thin stainless wire
to simulate the lazy not-in-use-windward sheet

Attachment:
P1050382.jpg
P1050382.jpg [ 1.43 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Before install--I had to measurer the luff lengths of the headsails accurately

Attachment:
P1050362.jpg
P1050362.jpg [ 1.24 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]



after some VERY nervy and hyper tense modelling.... they were on !

Attachment:
P1050388 - Copy.JPG
P1050388 - Copy.JPG [ 1.54 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


Attachment:
P1050384.jpg
P1050384.jpg [ 1.52 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]


for light relief after this--I added some of the Leechlines-- these inhibit the luff collapsing if backwinded,

Attachment:
P1050378.jpg
P1050378.jpg [ 1.12 MiB | Viewed 682 times ]



Attachment:
P1050381.jpg
P1050381.jpg [ 1.2 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]




clever eh ! ?! --

( modern yachts Spinnakers are flown at max efficiency with the windward leech ' curling ' ie just about on the point of collapse

( now they could do with leechlines deployed by to a virtual mast!! :heh: :cool_2:


Attachments:
P1050299.jpg
P1050299.jpg [ 1.33 MiB | Viewed 731 times ]
P1050382.jpg
P1050382.jpg [ 1.43 MiB | Viewed 704 times ]

_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com
Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 20, 2024 4:49 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Tue Sep 29, 2020 4:35 pm
Posts: 1881
Location: Bretagne, France
A lot of risk, but well worth it. :thumbs_up_1:

Sometimes you have to be reckless (Téméraire :big_grin: ).

_________________
Pascal

•Battleship Bretagne 3D: https://vu.fr/FvCY
•SS Delphine 3D: https://vu.fr/NeuO
•SS Nomadic 3D: https://vu.fr/tAyL
•USS Nokomis 3D: https://vu.fr/kntC
•USS Pamanset 3D: https://vu.fr/jXGQ


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sat Dec 21, 2024 4:42 am 
Offline

Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2017 2:43 am
Posts: 298
Beyond-excellent progress and great entertaining/learning :cool_2: .
Question about materials: where have you found the 0.05mm stainless steel wire? Any brand/seller to recommend? I am desperately looking for something like that (foldable but stiff enough) for my SLC-project tubing

_________________
http://www.3xblackcats.wordpress.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sat Dec 21, 2024 5:39 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 5:30 pm
Posts: 5568
Location: Nr Southampton England
This will do the job nicely

https://wireandstuff.co.uk/product/0-05 ... UWb6p2Ptt8

I also shop here
https://www.scientificwire.com/acatalog/tc-wire.html

for skinny copper wire tinned 0.05
I always buy a sample ( short length - for 0,05 uits 10 meters)

not cheap but one roll does last a looong time!

Hope to help
JB

_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 7:57 am 
Offline

Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 9:19 am
Posts: 1552
Beautiful work as always on the rigging. One question though, how do you paint the sea after adding all these yards, boats and other protrusions? If would be doing that my nerves would give in almost immediately out of fear of knocking some of that precious rigging into my resident Black Hole.


Last edited by Pieter on Mon Dec 23, 2024 6:19 am, edited 1 time in total.

Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 5:10 pm 
Offline

Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2017 2:43 am
Posts: 298
JIM BAUMANN wrote:
Hope to help

Thx so much! :thumbs_up_1:

_________________
http://www.3xblackcats.wordpress.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 27, 2024 4:44 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 5:30 pm
Posts: 5568
Location: Nr Southampton England
Good day all

The Christmas period has allowed me to to make tangible progress in daylight !

The rigging was ( seemed like anyhow) to be endless---but there was an end--
when I realised I could not add all the rigging and threw in accepted I had rigged
and added what I physically could in this small scale.!

One of the remaining outstanding tasks was the aft anchor racks/ skids
There were cut from 1/350 Pom-pom railings from an old ( historic! ) set from 1998)

suffice it to say it was chunky enough for my purposes !

These were bent into the shape I believe they should be

Attachment:
P1050438.jpg
P1050438.jpg [ 946.78 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


Installed with matt varnish , and a drop of CA...

Attachment:
P1050440.jpg
P1050440.jpg [ 1.37 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]


Once painted they were furnished with folded stocked Admiralty-type anchors

The Figure head... was another challenge
( portryaing the Germanic heroine Veleda )
( noy quite sure how that became identified with Bretagne)
but there is is

quote;

" The figurehead figured the prophet Veleda, an important character in the folklore of Brittany, with a sickle in hand and a wearing an oak leaf crown "
I made two of these figureheads...

O blamed on initially being misled by a contemporary drawing from an article
about Bretagne; only problemwas .... that the ship was still on the stocks...

so the drawing was somewhat subjective ( / wrong )
( but
the figure head I had made ...was quite good ! )

Attachment:
s-l1600.jpg
s-l1600.jpg [ 1.58 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]





I was fortunate to have a high res version of the ship in build and launched;
when zoomed in very much
( thanks to high quality res of the original
plate glass negative--probably around 10 x 8 inches)

I could make out that the arm was a different angle--the sickle was the other way round and its prientation was different.


Attachment:
zzzzz figure head  02t.jpg
zzzzz figure head 02t.jpg [ 997.39 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


I believed that the figure heads on these ships was plain white
similar to Napoleon and Valmy ( below)

Attachment:
zzz Valmy Figure head.jpg
zzz Valmy Figure head.jpg [ 2.41 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]


but in the photo image .... the oak leaf crown and the (toga/tunic armbands were picked out in contrasting colour)

Attachment:
zzzzz figure.. head  02t.jpg
zzzzz figure.. head 02t.jpg [ 153.35 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


To make this figure head I used a L'Arsenal ( French company ! ) cast 1/350 figure

suitable chopped and altered;
I chopped off the arms ( ouch )

I drilled through the shoulders and made new wire armature arms

Attachment:
P1050398 - Copy.JPG
P1050398 - Copy.JPG [ 1.15 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]



then bent the arms and thickened them with thinned white glue;

Attachment:
P1050408.jpg
P1050408.jpg [ 990.03 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


Attachment:
P1050414.jpg
P1050414.jpg [ 1.51 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]



then made the sickle which was too big

Attachment:
P1050405.jpg
P1050405.jpg [ 1.14 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]



and then made a smaller one...
Attachment:
P1050406.jpg
P1050406.jpg [ 996.54 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


Attachment:
P1050420 - Copy.JPG
P1050420 - Copy.JPG [ 1.03 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]


and then installed it to the figure head

Attachment:
P1050422 - Copy.JPG
P1050422 - Copy.JPG [ 854.23 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]


Attachment:
P1050423 - Copy.JPG
P1050423 - Copy.JPG [ 650.99 KiB | Viewed 571 times ]



Once installed on sticky varnish, the CA glue and then extend with thinned white glue

Attachment:
P1050454.jpg
P1050454.jpg [ 1.29 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]

Attachment:
P1050452.jpg
P1050452.jpg [ 1.09 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]


after making some differing sizes of flags

Attachment:
P1050442 - Copy.JPG
P1050442 - Copy.JPG [ 1.1 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]



the model is essentially finished aside from from completing the sea-scape and flat-coating;

ero--- leaving me with still plenty of opportunities for a catastrophe...!! :big_grin:

Attachment:
P1050448 - Copy.JPG
P1050448 - Copy.JPG [ 1.27 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]
Attachment:
P1050445 - Copy.JPG
P1050445 - Copy.JPG [ 1.36 MiB | Viewed 571 times ]

_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 27, 2024 6:14 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2011 12:04 pm
Posts: 1963
Location: Paris
WOW …

_________________
Eberhard

Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Image Image Image Image


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 27, 2024 6:15 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2011 12:04 pm
Posts: 1963
Location: Paris
One day I have to look for an opportunity to see her in real life!

_________________
Eberhard

Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Image Image Image Image


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Fri Dec 27, 2024 6:18 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 1:40 pm
Posts: 8339
Location: New Jersey
wefalck wrote:
WOW …

Yeah, what he said... :faint:

_________________
Martin

"Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday." John Wayne

Ship Model Gallery


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sat Dec 28, 2024 5:43 am 
Offline

Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2017 2:43 am
Posts: 298
MartinJQuinn wrote:
wefalck wrote:
WOW …

Yeah, what he said... :faint:


I second that :big_grin: :woo_hoo:

_________________
http://www.3xblackcats.wordpress.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sat Dec 28, 2024 5:55 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2008 6:17 am
Posts: 409
Location: Lerici
"we are not worthy, we are not worthy"

cit. Waine's World.

_________________
On the bench: evolution of Royal Italian Navy Ironclads-1/700

-Regia Nave Roma...no, not that one!


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sun Dec 29, 2024 8:09 am 
Offline

Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2016 5:33 pm
Posts: 1952
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Curious about those hammock rails being just plain gray color, is that a certainty? Not canvas dirty beige, but actually grey? Im sure your research is top notch, they just jump out quite a lot on the model, so I was curious and surprised of the way they appear on an otherwise coherent looking model.

_________________
- @Shipific on IG
my gallery


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Sun Dec 29, 2024 10:31 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 5:30 pm
Posts: 5568
Location: Nr Southampton England
Ahoi Pascal ! :wave_1:

You are quite correct in that many of the sailing Navies used bleached white canvas on their hammock stow
as well as some preserved ships-- the Danish Jylland for example.

HOWEVER :wave_1:

I did do some research and agonised about it at length!

In the absence of colour photos...(!! ) we rely on paintings of that era.
and the conclusion I drew ( ha ha :smallsmile: ) was that the artists of the time....
would have rendered the hammock covers in white if they had been so;
- grey, indeed , being an incongruous colour

I am fortunate in owning a large colour large print of this painting,




Attachment:
zzz bretagne.jpg
zzz bretagne.jpg [ 427.55 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]



a detail which is below--showing the covers to be grey.

Attachment:
P1050461.jpg
P1050461.jpg [ 1.23 MiB | Viewed 512 times ]



I did seek corroboration on other French ships that overlapped the era of wooden walls....

herewith a selection;

Attachment:
zz  corevtte.jpg
zz corevtte.jpg [ 358.68 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]



Attachment:
zzz   belle poule.jpg
zzz belle poule.jpg [ 415.44 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]


Attachment:
zzz napoleon.jpg
zzz napoleon.jpg [ 381.45 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]


the daguerreotype of Bretragne


Attachment:
zzz hmam.jpg
zzz hmam.jpg [ 800.58 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]


oh... and a b/w imnage of Bretagne in her schoolship days; the canvas does not appear to be white;

( though could be beige--but never seen that)

Attachment:
zz  bret  school ship.jpg
zz bret school ship.jpg [ 422.27 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]





and the preserved ship HMS Gannet ( though I have seen images with white canvas as well)
but this look greyish / grubby....

Attachment:
zzz canvas 1.jpg
zzz canvas 1.jpg [ 877.32 KiB | Viewed 512 times ]

_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Mon Dec 30, 2024 6:13 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 5:30 pm
Posts: 5568
Location: Nr Southampton England
Hello all again.

I am now on the final run--the seascape is well under way ( images soon!)

Interestingly;
I received an e-mail this morning from a ( wood) sailing ship builder in larger scales
( around 1/64 etc)
whose models looked very very good indeed !
He 'chastised' me for the lack of brown rigging and hemp coloured lines etc.

He had a point...( to a certain degree ) :big_grin:

however his models--most fine as they are --
are in full hull dockyard / builders style on brass finials.

They are beautifully built--but also somewhat ..errr... sterile.

now (....my personal opinion and hence disclaimer!)
.....................................................................................................

I feel that often the ' correct' colours in small scales can often look
overpowering to the sum total of a model
(-maybe even slightly -err ....garish...)
I cite also small scale WW2 warships that have ' white' signal lines
...whilst undoubtedly correct-- -- seem to glare...


...............................................................................................

I put it to him that my ship was around 11 x smaller,
--and I was,.... in effect
.... trying to produce a 3-D atmospheric painting.


and as such-( in my view ) -
against a light background( like sky !! )
-- all rigging appears 'black.' ( as was much of it was the tarred rigging !)

Attachment:
zzzHMS_warriorjune20092.jpg
zzzHMS_warriorjune20092.jpg [ 1.63 MiB | Viewed 478 times ]


Attachment:
zzz black rope .jpg
zzz black rope .jpg [ 2.63 MiB | Viewed 478 times ]



Attachment:
zzz on-deck-of-the-frigate-jylland-J5C692.jpg
zzz on-deck-of-the-frigate-jylland-J5C692.jpg [ 322.52 KiB | Viewed 478 times ]




Kind of as herewith in images below;-
But it got me thinking....

- what are the thoughts on this from you fellow modellers?


Attachments:
zzz  vaisseaux-de-roux.JPG
zzz vaisseaux-de-roux.JPG [ 66.46 KiB | Viewed 478 times ]
1697373168_3.jpg
1697373168_3.jpg [ 1.11 MiB | Viewed 478 times ]

_________________
....I buy them at three times the speed I build 'em.... will I live long enough to empty my stash...?
http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gallery ... index.html

IPMS UK SIG (special interest group) www.finewaterline.com
Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Mon Dec 30, 2024 8:09 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2011 12:04 pm
Posts: 1963
Location: Paris
That has been a discussion raging for several years now in various fora - since people discovered that 'Stockholm' (i.e. pine) tar is not the same as coal-tar. Most people today are not familiar with pine-tar, as it is not used on ships anymore, except in a restoration or artisanal context (particularly in northern Europe).

Coal-tar became available in large quantities from around the mid-1840s, when cities became lit by gas produced by coking coal. As a waste product it was a lot cheaper than pine-tar from Scandinavia, the Baltics or Russia. I gather the availability for maritime use is related to the spread of gas-lighting in the various countries, Britain maing a start here. It would be worthwhile researching the availability of and use by the French navy of coal-tar in the mid- to late 1850s.

From a modelling point of view, there are various aspects to consider:

- both types of tar, tend to weather rather quickly, turning pine-tar into a dull greyish brown and coal-tar into a dull dark grey. After a few month at sea and unless being re-tarred the aspects tend to converge according to what I have observed.

- at a distance, rigging tends to look dark regardless, whether its body-colour is dark brown or black; the eye cannot process the high contrast of the dark rigging against the sky and adjusts more to give definition to the sky than to the narrow lines of rigging.

I have considered this aspect in my budding sailing project and think that I will go for either an burnt umbra-wash on black or black toned down with some burnt umbra. However, this is for a scale about four times bigger (1/160 vs. 1/700).

In summary, I would not give these comments too much weight.

_________________
Eberhard

Former chairman Arbeitskreis historischer Schiffbau e.V. (German Association for Shipbuilding History)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Image Image Image Image


Report this post
Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 275 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14  Next

All times are UTC - 6 hours [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Brad Newland and 22 guests


You can post new topics in this forum
You can reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group