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That brass badge - it does not look at all real. It looks like something on a nautical souvenir shop starving artist kitsch sorta looks like a ship thing.I attach a photo similar to what I want.
Not sure I agree with that, but it could be better. If it doesn't look good enough, a better 3D plate would certainly be good enough. Any produced 3D plate the wrong size can easily be made the right size.That brass badge - it does not look at all real. It looks like something on a nautical souvenir shop starving artist kitsch sorta looks like a ship thing.
To become a master miniature carver to produce a single nameplate certainly seems like overkill. And your wood may be thinner than the above, but certainly not thinner than 3D printing can produce.A standing relief badge carved from wood would look better - and can be thinner.
Now we're chopping down rare trees and kiln- or air-drying them to produce that nameplate before carving them? That sounds like the most excessive of overkills.Ideal would be Buxus - which is almost impossible to get,
Castelo which is still available,
Dogwood which you have to harvest,
many of the harder fruitwood species - also harvest yourself - if you have Pyracantha with a thick enough trunk - season and shave- it is sure hard enough.
but if you are careful about the grain I think Hard Maple would do the job.

Ah! but once the first step is taken it could lead to a jump to the dark side.Now we're chopping down rare trees and kiln- or air-drying them to produce that nameplate before carving them? That sounds like the most excessive of overkills.

Times Roman 11 or 12 pt should do it. The name should stretch to about 2.5 in. (kerning) The border of the nameplate would extend beyond that. P R E. S I D E N. THopefully someone into 3D printing will step up.
It should be a simple job for someone with moderate 3D printing skills. All they should need is the size of the letters and the font.
What is the actual height of the letters you are looking for? What is the font?

Ah! but once the first step is taken it could lead to a jump to the dark side.
It is a possible solution - not at all practical unless someone from the dark side is a mentor with gifts - for a one-off
For this one-off the problem is getting the Maple with the needed dimensions. The carving tools can be made from steel knitting needles and broken hacksaw blades. If not heat treated and quenched at the correct color it just means more frequent stropping.
If plastic anything is allowed by your rules a 3D print may be the efficient answer to it.
I wonder which Ramillies is the model in the picture?
1749 90?
1763 74?
1785 74?
I found it 1763 74 - ""museum quality"" cold cast bronze decorations - for sale
For this particular purpose - my money is on 3D printing being able to do the decorations - faster, for less money, zero physical work
A 3D printing shop may find a customer at that model building shop.

That brass badge - it does not look at all real. It looks like something on a nautical souvenir shop starving artist kitsch sorta looks like a ship thing.
A standing relief badge carved from wood would look better - and can be thinner.
Ideal would be Buxus - which is almost impossible to get,
Castelo which is still available,
Dogwood which you have to harvest,
many of the harder fruitwood species - also harvest yourself - if you have Pyracantha with a thick enough trunk - season and shave- it is sure hard enough.
but if you are careful about the grain I think Hard Maple would do the job.
Chisels --
Ramelson - what with the generational change in control - has far fewer sizes - but for big cuts -excellent
Dockyard - the brand name may have been sold - wide choice - not economy priced
Jewelers gravers - engraving blades using a common handle - thick looking but the edge is just as sharp - GRS is good
Rio Grande is one of many choices https://www.riogrande.com/search-pa...rande.com/search-page/?q=gravers&tab=products
You can always make your own mini chisels -- just start with good steel and learn about tempering.

Yes, its an .stl extension. I will go back and see if i can find it. No, never had anyone actually try to print it. I only found companies that print for industry, so hundreds or thousands of copies. I just have this one little product I need.Forgive me if I am giving you information you already know, but I am going over the requirements as I see them.
To cast in brass you will need a model to make a mold.
You said you tried 3D printing but it was too big. Did you print it or have someone else do it?
Usual print files are .stl 3D files.
They are pretty easy to re-scale in applications like Blender or even within the printing software. I'm sure there are online apps that will rescale for you.
We have many SOS members who are into 3D printing. Perhaps someone can do it for you for a fair cost.

MSW - before crash #2 had a regular industry with family members who inherited one seeking information about these "valuable antique ship models" and how many thousands of dollars they are worth or how to clean dust, dirt and layers of tobacco film and or cooking oil.Jaager I had not thought of it as looking like a kitsch thing, but you are probably correct. We hate those models in those shops, don't we?
Short of actually carving it from wood I have no idea.If i cast in pewter from a 3D product, do you have any suggestions as to how to make it look more authentic, like wood?
If the original on the ship was painted, and it most certainly was, after painting your model there is no way to tell what it is made of in this scale, so any material should produce good facsimile. Unless you wanted to keep the pewter in it's original shiney state, I see no reason to cast it in pewter instead of using the original 3D part, but that's your decision of course. I believe the 3D part would be better detailed than a pewter casting from it.If i cast in pewter from a 3D product, do you have any suggestions as to how to make it look more authentic, like wood?





