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You KNEW the guy ?You remind me of Bezaleel, the son of Uri, and Aholiab, the son of Ahisamach. Both fine craftsmen from the book of Exodus.
Just by reputation...although I feel like I’m old enough to have known them today. Lots of humidity today.You KNEW the guy ?![]()
Hi John. The faux treenails come courtesy of a technique I learned from @Maarten. See this earlier post https://shipsofscale.com/sosforums/threads/vasa-1-65-deagostini.5904/post-148990 or check out Maarten's Alert build log to see how he does them using a butane powered soldering iron.Paul,
Congrats on your grandson's Name Day (I was a big GÖT fan - and read all the books - lol)
PS: I may have missed it - how did you replicate the look of treenails along the hull? - Scarf joints came out![]()
Thank you, Kurt. Yes, the randomness effect comes across so strongly on the ship at the museum (and on the 1:10 model) that it was something I was hoping I could capture. I am aware this runs counter to the way most models are constructed and some will find my presentation of the hull off-putting - but I'm pretty satisfied.It looks exactly like the real hull! Amazing that you captured the sporadic appearance of the iron nails and trenails so close to scale.
Thanks, Jim! Lots of hours indeed. And this time I was smart enough to blacken the nails BEFORE I put them on the hull. See, I'm trainable!Fantastic work, Paul!! Lot's of hours to make such beauty!! WOW!![]()
Absolutely awesome!It looks exactly like the real hull! Amazing that you captured the sporadic appearance of the iron nails and trenails so close to scale.