Television is rather a frightening business. But I get all the relaxation I want from my collection of model soldiers.
Peter Cushing
Showing posts with label fighting sail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fighting sail. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 November 2019

England Expects



I have more or less finished the Frigates for Black Seas and I thought it would be handy to put another guide to how I do the sea bases here.




They still need the pennants and ratlines for everything but the Surprise but they're certainly ready for the first game. I'll rig and add the sails to the brigs later.











The bases are a refinement of the ones I did for Cruel Seas which are basically a scaled down version of the ones I did for the U-Boat diorama.

The structure is a bit of sheet styrene - 2mm thick to provide a strong base. These are then covered in polyfilla and painted with dark sea green. It's important to make sure the ships fit but you can use this stage to model them listing or cresting waves.



Then add some offwhite/dark sea green highlights to the crests but also in random places. Then coat the whole thing in still water (or gloss varnish; still water is better because it levels out any little holes you have in the polyfilla)



Then slather Vallejo Water Effect Atlantic all over. It looks very bright but don't worry....



...it dries translucent blue. Leave it for 24 hours to make sure it's cured properly.


Now mix off-white, atlantic blue and still water and sponge it all over the higher points on your wave structures and wakes.



Then slather another, slightly thinner coat of the atlantic blue  and leave for another 24 hours. 


Now do your final wave crests and waves with a sponge, making sure to leave the stuff from the layer below visible. 


Glue the ships down


And finally, dip some cotton wool in the still water and place it around the bows and stern; brush it into place with the still water and you have sea foam. 


Hope this helps! Next up, an actual game. 


Sunday, 2 July 2017

The Far Side of the World


"The Acheron is a tough nut to crack... more than twice our guns, more than twice our numbers, and they will sell their lives dearly. [...] Much will depend on your accuracy... however... even crippled, she will still be dangerous, like a wounded beast."






The second part of my little treat to myself. The difficulty with building the Acheron is that she never existed as a ship; in the book version of Fat Side of the World, the enemy is an American Privateer, more or less the Constitution. For the film, they replaced it with a french Frigate.

I bought a Langton French frigate and brass sails and set to work creating as close as I could version of the ship from the film:













I think, overall I got there. I haven't normally put flags and signals on these models, but for this one I decided to try and match the screen version.

So another two ships to add to my growing fleet.

Tuesday, 30 August 2016

Master and Commander

It's post 200! Blimey, you do whack through them, don't you? And it's always nice to have a landmark post with some landmark content. So here is the first go at 1/1200 ships completed.



She's a 112 gun Ocean class French ship of the line, the Imperial - later named the Royal Louis - and painted in curiously british yellow and black. 

The painting was relatively simple but hampered by the fact that the sails were in place and also that I'd stuck the ratlines on. Next time they stay off until the rigging stage. 


A couple of shots before rigging. 

The rigging is based in the standing rigging and I only did the minimum to provide structural integrity to the masts. As we've discussed before I have an very unprofessional approach to historical accuracy when it comes to miniatures. 




Overall I'm very happy with this. For a first attempt it's pretty good.  I've learnt a lot which I can use on the next one. Which, history fans, looks like being the Santissima Trinidad.