Welcome Guest Search | Active Topics | Log In | Register

10 Pages «<34567>»
Gokstad Viking Ship by Jack.Aubrey, Dusek Shipkits, 1:35 Scale. Options
jack.aubrey
#81 Posted : 13 April 2016 11:41:08

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
Wednesday, April 13, 2016

It seems it has been months since I had inhalations of cyanoacrylate glue as now !!!

I feel a bit dazed but now the shields are almost finished, lacking only a coat of matt transparent paint to hide the small but inevitable glue smudges.

01 20160413_111636.jpg
tigerace
#82 Posted : 13 April 2016 11:57:27

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/07/2014
Posts: 4,269
Points: 12,713
Location: Scotland
Wow that`s alot of shields great build Cool regards Phil
COMING SOON =1/72 Italeri diorama`s Battle for the Reichstag and Stalingrad battle at the tractor factory 1/16 Trumpeter King Tiger with loads of extras ON THE GO= refurbishment of 1/25 Tamiya tiger 1 , amt Star trek kits and space 1999 models

So Much to Build,But What a Hobby!


Plymouth57
#83 Posted : 13 April 2016 12:17:31

Rank: Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 03/10/2012
Posts: 2,066
Points: 6,193
Location: Plympton
Well done Jack!Cool Cool Cool

Building a clinker hull is far more difficult than the more usual carvel built hulls where you can sand away any little mishaps! My very first attempt at ship building was way back and was also a Viking Longship, (possibly by Billing Boats?) She never got finished as I was too young to figure out the steaming and bending process to get the planks to fit! Blushing (And the ruddy planks were thick ones too!)BigGrin
Mind you, I've still got the half built hull and the rest is still in the box it came in - maybe one day I'll try to dismantle her and start again!Blink
Regarding your decks, you might try weathering or aging them, if you have a look at Post 51 on Page 3 of my Messines diorama in the Figure and Diorama section, there's a description of how to make up your own weathering solution with nothing more than white vinegar and steel wool! (Found it on the internet!) It works really well and might be worth trying out on some scrap bits to see the effect.
Best of luck with your build, I think all my shields were moulded plastic!

Robin.
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
davetwin
#84 Posted : 13 April 2016 16:27:18

Rank: Super-Elite
Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 27/01/2014
Posts: 5,060
Points: 14,980
I couldn't work out what I was looking at until I read the text LOL
ian smith
#85 Posted : 14 April 2016 23:00:17

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 16/08/2010
Posts: 2,771
Points: 8,344
Location: Brighton
Hi Jack.
Shields are looking very good. keep the pictures coming Ian Cool BigGrin
Current builds.Hachettes build the bismark,HMS Victory, HMS Hood.
Finished Builds Corel HMS Victory cross section.
birdaj2
#86 Posted : 15 April 2016 09:15:25

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 31/05/2010
Posts: 5,679
Points: 17,011
Location: Wiltshire
Some excellant work you have put into this one very well done.
Happy Modelling

BUILDING: Hachette Spitfire Mk 1A, Constructo Mayflower
SUBSCRIPTION COMPLETE (Awaiting building): USS Constitution, Sovereign of the Seas, 1:200 Bismarck (Hachette)
COMPLETED: Porsche 911, E-Type Jaguar, Lam Countach
jack.aubrey
#87 Posted : 16 April 2016 14:43:59

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
As usually a comulative thanksgiving to all the people who answered me, with a particular remark to Plymouth57 for its weathering suggestion. Jack.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

As the ingredients necessary for the kind of weathering suggested by Plymouth57 does not require special ingredients or alchemy, I decided to proceed immediately to a field test and, if positive, to proceed without delay to weather the Viking ship deck.

Below the properly prepared solution, and now I've just to wait long enough to get the appropriate color to proceed with the tests.

01 20160416_113430.jpg


However, I surfed a bit on the internet to learn more about this wood weathering method and I discovered that it is a very common practice to produce an antique furniture, often adopted by many restorers. I found a good explanation on http://www.wikihow.com/Age-Wood-With-Vinegar-and-Steel-Woolsite that I propose below in detail. Happy reading, Jack.

Part 1: Preparing to Make Your Stain

1) Gather your materials. This is a fairly simple process that requires minimal supplies. You may already have them at home. If not, you should be able to find everything you need at a dollar store, grocery store, or somewhere like Target or Walmart.
White distilled vinegar. Any brand will do.
Steel wool. Fine graded is ideal because it disintegrates best, but any grade will work.
A container of some sort. This can be a bucket, a jar, a pot, a bowl, or whatever else you have on hand. If you dislike the smell of vinegar you may want to opt for a container you can close while the mixture sits, particularly if you want it to get quite dark, as this will involve letting it sit for a while.
Rubber gloves. These are optional, but a good idea if you are concerned about cutting your fingers on the steel wool, or if you plan on making a particularly dark solution that might stain your fingers.
A strainer. This is also optional, as you can apply the stain straight from whatever container you made it in. This will come in handy if you want to transfer the liquid to another container to store and use again later.
A paintbrush.

2) Make sure you are staining an appropriate kind of wood. Some woods will work better than others. You don’t want to go to the trouble of making a stain only to discover that it won’t stain.
Wood with bifurcated grains is best, particularly where the wood grain is layered in hard/soft layers, so the soft layers are affected by the process but the hard layers are not, causing the wood to look old.
Softwoods are easier to work with than hardwoods. Southern yellow pine, western cedar, and fir are excellent candidates for aging. Red oak, maple, or other slow-growing, tightly grained woods are not.
Hardwoods with a distinct grain, such as hickory, white oak, elm, or ash, can also work well.
This method is not appropriate for laminate flooring, as the vinegar will likely cause the glue holding the layers together to fall apart.

3) Decide how you want your wood to look. Stains made with steel wool and vinegar range from a reddish, rusty brown, to a very dark, burnt brown. They also range in intensity from very subtle, to very intense. These factors are influenced by the ratio of steel wool to vinegar, and by how long you let the mixture sit. Before you begin, decide approximately color stain you want to create, and plan accordingly.
The color of the stain is determined by how long it sits. Stain soaked for just a couple days will have a dark, burnt tone. The longer it sits, the rustier in color it will become.
The intensity of the stain is determined both by how many steel wool pads you use, and how long you let the mixture sit. 1-3 steel wool pads to a half-gallon of vinegar should work for most projects. If you want your stain to darken faster, try adding another steel wool pad. If it becomes too dark, simply dilute it with water.

Part 2: Making Your Stain

1) Break up your steel wool. This step is not strictly required, but it will help the disintegration process and speed things up. You will want to wear plastic gloves to avoid cutting your fingers. Break apart the steel wool pads, and put the pieces in the container you are mixing your stain in.

2) Combine your materials. This is pretty straightforward. Just pour the vinegar over the steel wool. Give it a good mix, and put the cover on.

3) Let it sit. You can create a very subtle stain in just 15 minutes or so, but you will probably want to wait longer. 2-4 days will make a stain suitable for most projects, but you can let the mixture steep for months at a time to create a more dramatic effect.

4) Strain the stain. This is an optional step, and is more important if you plan on storing the stain for later use. When it reaches the color you want, you can pour the mixture through a colander and into a new, sealable container. You can also use it straight from whatever container it is in.

Part 3: Applying Your Stain

1) Stain a test surface. Without knowing what your stain looks like when applied, you might not want to brush it onto your furniture just yet. Brush some onto a scrap piece of the same sort of wood, or a part of whatever you are staining that is not usually visible, and wait an hour. If you don’t like the color you end up with, make adjustments to your mixture; add more steel wool or wait longer if you want it to be darker, wait longer if you want it to be redder, or dilute it with water if you want it to be subtler.

2) Sand the wood. Sanding your wood down before painting it can give it an even more dramatically weathered look. This step is optional, and your stain should look good with or without it. It’s just a matter of what effect you want to achieve.

3) Brush the stain onto the wood. There is no particular technique necessary for this. Brush in the direction of the grain, coating it evenly, and let it sit to allow the stain to penetrate the wood. Then just let it dry, and sit back and admire your work.

4) Wax the wood. You can choose whether or not to do this based on how you want the final product to look. For a polished sheen, wait for the wood to dry completely, brush on the wax, let it dry for an hour, and polish it with a towel. If you want a more natural, weather-beaten look, skip this step.
Plymouth57
#88 Posted : 16 April 2016 23:14:04

Rank: Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 03/10/2012
Posts: 2,066
Points: 6,193
Location: Plympton
Way to go Jack!Cool

I think I remember the wording of that explanation so that's quite possibly the same place I got my info from. I started on a website about weathering wooden buildings for model railways and then went on to the furniture sites!
What I did was to make up a quantity of the mixture as per those instructions and then poured half of it into a second tub, diluting that with clean water to make a 50% solution then half again to make a 25%. Then whichever one worked best on any particular wood was used straight from the little plastic tub.
One word of advice - make sure you have plenty of ventilation when applying it - I have very little sense of smell but I could certainly smell that stuff!BigGrin

Best of Luck.

Robin.
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
jack.aubrey
#89 Posted : 17 April 2016 15:42:14

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
@Plymouthh57: it seems will need more than 24 hours to have the vinegar solution ready, after this elapsed time the liquid is still clear. May be the vinegar I used is not enough powerful . . but anyway I can wait, I'm not in hurry. Do you think that adding some lemon juice may help to accelerate the process ?


Sunday, April 17, 2016

While waiting for the weathering vinegar solution becomes ready . . . I think it will take some days, here are some elements of the superstructure completed and positioned (but not yet fixed) on the deck . .
The model begins to take its beautiful original form . .

Cheers, Jack.Aubrey.

01 20160416_110156.jpg


02 20160416_110144.jpg


03 20160416_110123.jpg


04 20160416_110116.jpg


05 20160416_110035.jpg


06 20160416_110127.jpg


07 20160416_110136.jpg
Plymouth57
#90 Posted : 17 April 2016 17:58:18

Rank: Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 03/10/2012
Posts: 2,066
Points: 6,193
Location: Plympton
Hi Jack

You could certainly try adding lemon juice to increase the acidity, the other thing you could try is to actually reduce the amount of steel wool to see if the vinegar will react quicker on a smaller amount. I don't know much about vinegars I'm afraid, all it says on my bottle of Tesco white vinegar is "Barley Malt Vinegar" - is yours barley malt too?
I did wonder if temperature was a factor but when I posted my Messines installment it was during a March - I would imagine Milan is slightly warmer than Plymouth!!BigGrin
Other than that, it's probably just a question of waiting, I think my solution was about 3 days old when I tried it.

Best of luck M8

Robin.
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
jack.aubrey
#91 Posted : 18 April 2016 12:23:39

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
Plymouth57 wrote:
. . You could certainly try adding lemon juice to increase the acidity, the other thing you could try is to actually reduce the amount of steel wool to see if the vinegar will react quicker on a smaller amount . .

Thanks Robin for your input: I think I'll let to work for some time the current solution and, in absence of results I'll try to reduce the amount of stell wool or increase the quantity of vinegar: I think should be the same, do you agree ? As last chance I can try to add lemon juice.
Rgds, Jack.
jack.aubrey
#92 Posted : 23 April 2016 17:00:14

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
Friday, April 23, 2016
 
It's now more than seven days that I put the steel wool in the vinegar but the solution does not seem yet ready: the color looks roughly the same the vinegar had the first day and the steel wool does not seem to have rusted or oxidized at all.
This makes me tempted to say: it is no longer the steel wool than once. . . or it is not the vinegar than once.
Really I don't understand what is happening. I tried to reduce the amount of steel wool in the solution and I put the discarded wool in a solution of apple vinegar . . . so now I have to tests pending.
Maybe it's ready and works perfectly but at the moment it is not known whether this is true.
Vinegar of bad quality or incorruptible steel wool (such as stainless steel)? Or maybe that it will take some months as the cited website article wrote ?
 
Regards, Jack.
ian smith
#93 Posted : 23 April 2016 17:55:56

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 16/08/2010
Posts: 2,771
Points: 8,344
Location: Brighton
Hi Jack.
some really nice progress, with the mast steps in place. good luck with your weathering project, hope it not to long before you can try it. keep up the good work.Cool Cool BigGrin
regards Ian
Current builds.Hachettes build the bismark,HMS Victory, HMS Hood.
Finished Builds Corel HMS Victory cross section.
Plymouth57
#94 Posted : 23 April 2016 20:08:06

Rank: Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 03/10/2012
Posts: 2,066
Points: 6,193
Location: Plympton
Hi again Jack.

I can't understand why your solution isn't changing colour after a whole week! What I'll do is make up another mix myself and take a photo after each day to see how quickly it changes colour (or not!)
If mine does react as before it might be the steel wool as you said, that being the case, I could send you a bit of my wool to try.

Robin.
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
Gandale
#95 Posted : 23 April 2016 23:22:14

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered, Global Forum Support, Moderator, Official Builds, Administrators

Joined: 08/09/2012
Posts: 15,172
Points: 46,151
Location: Aberdeen
She's looking fab Jack... Am sure you'll get the weathering solution problem resolved very soon.... Cool Cool

Regards

Alan
jack.aubrey
#96 Posted : 24 April 2016 12:38:28

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
Many thanks to all of you for your encouraging messages . . in particular to Robin regarding the weathering solution.

This morning, after nine days, the situation is as follows:
- image 01 shows the solution just after its preparation on April 16th;
- image 02 as it is today, after I removed some steel wool and added some new vinegar,
- image 03 shows the second sample I made with the discarded steel wool from first sample and using apple vinegar (remember that the color of this vinegar is darker).
Something seems to be happened, the solution is not darker but is more cloudy, but it will be enough ?

In a few days I'll try to stain some wood . . may be it works.

01 20160416_113430.jpg


02 20160424_131704.jpg


03 20160424_131721.jpg
Plymouth57
#97 Posted : 24 April 2016 12:59:50

Rank: Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionOutstanding Build: An award for an outstanding buildBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 03/10/2012
Posts: 2,066
Points: 6,193
Location: Plympton
Hi Jack.

Something does seem to be happening in that last photo, its worth a try I think. I had a sudden thought after my last post - if the point of the solution is to get a chemical reaction between iron oxide and the acid vinegar - try putting a little sample of steel wool in a jar of plain water! It should start to rust in a matter of hours (unless you really do have stainless steel wool!)BigGrin
Once its rusty, then put it in the vinegar as before. It would be ironic if European vinegar has had all the acid removed 'for health and safety'!!LOL

Robin.
First wooden ship: The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second: Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third: HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1
birdaj2
#98 Posted : 24 April 2016 17:56:35

Rank: Super-Elite

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 31/05/2010
Posts: 5,679
Points: 17,011
Location: Wiltshire
Jack

As ever the build looks wonderful and so accurately put together.

The old vinegar and wire wool thing is an odd one. If you do manage to get the reaction required in many instances there is disappointment because the wood does not changed colour as expected. Apparently that is to do with the tannins in the wood.

Just by way of interest some of the links on the following search may be of interest to you.

http://www.bing.com/sear...ersationid=&pc=EUPP_
Happy Modelling

BUILDING: Hachette Spitfire Mk 1A, Constructo Mayflower
SUBSCRIPTION COMPLETE (Awaiting building): USS Constitution, Sovereign of the Seas, 1:200 Bismarck (Hachette)
COMPLETED: Porsche 911, E-Type Jaguar, Lam Countach
jack.aubrey
#99 Posted : 27 April 2016 10:33:15

Rank: Vice-Master

Active Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered

Joined: 28/05/2014
Posts: 938
Points: 2,823
Location: Milan (Italy)
Tuesday, April 26, 2016

After a wait state of more than a week since I prepared the vinegar/steel wool solution and having not seen any significant change in color, rather discouraged, I come to the conclusion that, before archiving this experience, it would be worth to make a couple of tests . . just to understand better this strange situation.

So I took the two solutions I prepared, one with classic vinegar and the other with apple vinegar and, as instructed, I filtered them with a sieve for tea and let them decant for +/- one hour while I went to get the same timber used for the Viking ship deck.

The amazing thing is that after about an hour since I filtered the solution and thrown away the steel wool, the colour of the two solutions "suddenly" became much more dark . .

So I proceeded to brush the two solutions on the wood samples and, after a few minutes, just long enought to let the wood dry, I realized that the solution was properly working . . and very, very well !

Encouraged, I continued with the tests. Between the two different acid solutions there were not much differences, the one with apple vinegar gave a slightly lighter color after drying. However, both seemed too dark, although realistic, for my mind.

I then diluited a part of the solution (the one with the classic vinega) with water in proportion 1 to 1 and made another test: slightly lighter result but still too dark . .
Another dilution with water and another test. I repeated this process for 6-7 times always adding water.

At the end I found the concentration that was working for me: say about 1 part of the original solution, and 9-10 parts of water. With these proportions I got a color that I felt was fine for the type of timber used. So, at this point, I decided to do the "real" work on the ship deck. The result can be seen in the two images below. The images, especially the colours, do not give totally the idea of the result: with natural light the weathering is more evidently highlighted.
Among other things, I noticed that the samples used in the tests over time tend to darken further, so what you see may change slightly tomorrow, presenting itself a few darker pattern. We'll see. I still have an additional option, if necessary: a second coat of the liquid, which will darken even more the wood, highlighting the gray tone. But I prefer to wait until tomorrow to decide . . just to see the stabilized result.

Finally, after this satisfactory result (at least for me), I want to thank all the people who participated at this interesting discussion.

Greetings, Jack.

01 20160426_123151.jpg


02 20160426_123203.jpg
delboy271155
#100 Posted : 27 April 2016 16:41:19
Rank: Administration

Publisher Medal: Featured Build of the MonthActive Service Medal: 500 post active service MedalPurple Medal: Super active service medal for 1000 postsTurquoise Medal: Turquoise Medal for model making know-how contributionBuild-Diary Medal: Build-Diary Medal of HonourRed Medal: Red Medal
Groups: Registered, Forum Support Team, Administrators, Global Forum Support Team, Moderator, Official Builds

Joined: 09/11/2012
Posts: 8,302
Points: 23,994
Location: East midlands
Hi Jack, BigGrin

Good to see you got the result you wanted from the home made weathering solution. Cool Cool

Eagerly awaiting next update. Drool

Regards
delboy271155
(Derek)
COME BACK GUY FAWKES "YOUR COUNTRY NEEDS YOU"






Users browsing this topic
Guest (4)
10 Pages «<34567>»
Forum Jump  
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.

Powered by YAF | YAF © 2003-2009, Yet Another Forum.NET
This page was generated in 0.409 seconds.
DeAgostini