First Place was taken by this superb IJN Yamato (Tamiya kit), built by Mark Glidden:




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I'm interested in reading your arguments. Please elaborate.Goodwood wrote:Personally, I think those first/second place awards should be swapped. Other than that, they're both excellent ships.












I had never actually dug very deeply into the whole competitive side of scale model building. But this year, I noticed there were fewer warships at the hobby expo than I remembered, and I wanted to document the competition while there are still warships being entered. When I saw these two ships, though, I wondered how one could be judged better than the other, because frankly, my eyes are just not that good anymore, and they both looked equally well-made. I have to use pretty thick reading glasses to build anything small in my chosen scale (1:144), and can't imagine building either one of them.Goodwood wrote:And at last, my eyes are opened. Thanks for taking the time on this, Rob, it explains a lot about show models and how they're judged, and why I'll never, ever be able to compete, no matter the level.
I wondered about those numbers as well. They aren't present on the 1:10 Yamato in Kure, so I don't have a clue. Maybe I can contact the builder and ask him about it.taskforce48 wrote:What's up with the numbers running along Yamato's deck?
Both great builds by the way, thanks for sharing,
Matt
And looking at the decal sheet, both numbers and rectangles are provided. I think we sometimes see the rectangle shapes molded onto plastic decks, but this is what they actually were, I guess.Frame markings can be applied with Numbers or Rectangular shapes
Timmy,Timmy C wrote:It doesn't matter how much work was put into the model - if it has gaps and glue spots, it will lose to a simpler model with flawless assembly and painting. If, of course, all the basic things were equal, then they may chose to go down the list and judge based on other things like amount of modifications, complexity of paint, etc.
When you start judging subjectively like this, all objectivity goes out the window, and along with it the reputation of the show.Goodwood wrote:Well, based on my own personal (and somewhat subjective) criteria, there are a couple of reasons. First of all, the Yamato is a very popular subject and thus, I'd be slightly more inclined to relate a bit more toward the subject which is more obscure;