Theonly thing I can comment on, is that the food rope´- in Ø-should be miner than the shroudsNice job for first attempt. Mine was not that good until I had done a couple of ships.
Thank you! I can see a significant difference.
No, you are right. I started late 60, but with the rigning, I had the luck, that of eldest uncles- long gone- had a few years on clipper ships- Australia or Chile. so from them, I learned a lot. There was nothing at that time. Long before the Computer age, laser cut etc. It WAS PURE HAND JOB.. it was finished 1980.Good job on those ratlines!!! The internet didn't even exist when I tied my first ones.. I am sure they did not turn out as well as yours.
...actually, this is how a scratch build is usually started. You did a great job on your build, even though it was tough.It was a tough build, as only the FALSE KEEL, KEEL, BOW part and Sternpost were precut. the rest you had to use your handsaw.. the one with the arch. No instruction manual, but it came with drawings 1:1, where the instruction was written. I think there were 17 or 18 sheets, but they are gone now. It was a model from Amati. there were mistakes, but for first build big warship, it was not that bad. before that, I made quite a lot of billing Boat fishing Cur¡tters- which are no longer in there range, but similar to the crabben cutter
It is as many times up to the Builder Himself to take that decision. I personally do it light black cord-, much thinner than the throughs. General you will see many Models with White Cord - it looks better- where it should be light brown, according to the raw material.Nice rat lines. Brings up a question for me where using white lines for the horizontals is concerned. So, the shroud lines are tar-coated and I’ve read where rat lines were not. So often though, in movies and art you see them as all black. -I kind of like that look too.
Question is....Should I be tying my rat lines with white line?
Nice rat lines. Brings up a question for me where using white lines for the horizontals is concerned. So, the shroud lines are tar-coated and I’ve read where rat lines were not. So often though, in movies and art you see them as all black. -I kind of like that look too.
Question is....Should I be tying my rat lines with white line?
more black or dark brown as i mentioned. it is, in fact, part of the standing riggen and there treated.The truth may be, as so often, somewhere in the middle.
I gather ratlines typically would have been made from material heavily soaked with tar during the making. So they would be of some greyish-brownish colour, given also the weathering and salt deposits. I would try to avoid too stark contrast to the rest of the standing rigging. The same applies to the running rigging, I think the contrast to the standing rigging should not be too strong. The smaller the scale, the less contrast I would go for.
They used often Stockholm Tar, which is obtained from resinous trees and has various shades of brown. Since the middle of the 19th century more and more tar as residue from coking hard coal - to obtain gas for illumination and to make coke for steel-making, became available in large quantities. This tar is black in concentrated form and dark brown in thinnish layers. So one needs to make distinctions for different historic periods.
In general, I think the ratlines might be lighter in colour than the shrouds, as their material may have been treated only during the manufacture, but not after installation.
BTW:
You have to be careful looking at photos of sailing replicas or museum ships, which have often modern lines, which has to be not treated like in the good old time
so you can find in the web every kind of colour:
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and the Hermione, which represents maybe the most accurate replica using natural ropes by 95%:
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Hermione - a 32-gun Concorde-class frigate fitted for 12-pounder guns - dockyards of Rochefort, France
During the visit of the modelers event in Rochefort I had the chance to visit also the frigate Hermione in the docks of Rochefort. In the first post you can find a short description, following the photos I made during my visit....if questions, please do not hesitate to ask photo by Uwe From...shipsofscale.com