- Joined
- Jun 30, 2012
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- 433

Thank you - Bulolo was the type of ship that I used to sail in myself, and I always found them infinitely more interesting than warships, with their many different designs, colours shapes and sizes. An account of one sea battle was pretty much like another to me. If you like that sort of thing, merchant ships were always in the thick of it when wars came along, but generally, we were a peaceful bunch. This is one I sailed in myself - RMS Edinburgh Castle.Wow! Your build of the Bulolo is amazing. That is a beautiful ship. The Bulolo would be a great subject for a larger build also.
Bill
I think it's the thought of building such tiny models that people shy away from building them themselves. With small scale models getting the hull lines correct must be a real challenge when working from just a photo or drawing. Modern kits come with lots of instructions and the number of different models available these days is actually very small so there are plenty of builds out there to refer to and get some help. Personally, I'm all fingers and thumbs with rubbish eyesight so making and fitting tiny parts is the reason I would fail ( the smallest scale I would work to is 1/75 simply because anything smaller is beyond my dexterity limit!).I stopped sending models to auctions years ago. And I stopped even building them a year ago, but have become more academic on the subject now, devoting myself to merchant navy research and plan drawing. But looking at the views for this particular topic - 6,469 this morning, indicates to me more than a passing interest. Lots of ship modellers tell me that they would like to build them, but "could never do anything like that!" Where the truth of the matter is that using special techniques, they are nowhere near as difficult to build as kits, it is simply a matter of trying. There are no knots in the rigging, as it is lots of short lengths of copper wire glued on.
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