Thanks for that Tony and sorry to hear you might be alone this year! I hope you'll find a whole lot to interest you on that site, once you start on one of these its very um, time consuming! - the Cathedral! Make sure you've got plenty of ink in your printer!
Here's the first section:
Before starting,
Photos 6 and
7 illustrate the benefits of using both a good quality card to print on and the better quality print mode on your printer. The example on the left which is the one used in the build was printed in a higher quality on my shiny brand new
Epson ET2720 (one of the new eco-tank printers with fill-able ink tanks instead of those ruddy little cartridges) onto
140gm Supersharp coated card. The one on the right was standard quality onto 140gm basic white card. They will both make perfectly good models, but the extra sharpness and brighter colours make all the difference in the final appearance.
So to start the construction,
Photo 8 shows the first piece on the instruction sheet. This is the main head section, the red lines indicate tabs that are glued together whilst the green lines show where curves have to first be added to the otherwise flat card. In this piece there is a general curve which forms the back of the head and two curves below the eyes to round off the face area. The actual piece is shown cut away from the A4 sheet in
Photo 9 and cut to shape in
Photo 10. The parts can be cut out with scissors but I prefer to use a modelling knife with a small pointed scalpel type blade. Its always best to start each paper model with a new blade if possible and where the cut is to remove a deep ‘V’ beside a tab (such as under the eyes seen here) I find it easier to cut from the outer edge into the V on both sides of the cut, starting from the bottom of the V outwards can sometimes tear the card instead of cutting cleanly. The pre-curving of the card can be seen in
Photo 11, with the top of the head sitting proud of the mat. The first tab to be glued is the centre fold shown by the white arrow and the join is shown glued together in
Photo 12, also illustrating the curve built in to the joint by the pre-folding. The best glue I’ve found is
Deluxe Card Glue which I used on the two Sopwith Pups. It is a white PVA type glue which dries clear within a few minutes and has an almost instant ‘grab’ so you have to be accurate when bringing the two surfaces together! (If not, you can pull the two pieces of card apart straight away and re-glue), I apply it to the tabs with a cheapie natural bristle small brush. Despite it being titled a card glue it will also glue wood and plastic and even metal (when gluing it to card).
In
Photo 13, the two tabs either side of the central join have been glued creating the rounded back of the head with only the front side tabs, the eyes and the chin at the front to complete. These are shown glued down in
Photo 14. The next section is the kitten’s muzzle which follows the same procedure as shown in
Photos 15 to
19. Just two simple curves on this part to round off the cheeks. The card can either be curved by finger pressure alone or, sometimes easier, smoothed around a suitable rounded object, for the kitten I used a selection of smooth paintbrush handles to achieve the curves (some are shown later). Where the tabs are passed under the card at a shallow angle as on this piece, a useful tip is to use sharp pointed tweezers to grip the tab along the fold line and then gently rotate the gripping tips to bend the tab down as shown in
Photo 19. You can also use the same technique to grip the tab in place when gluing the card together until the glue holds fast (but make sure the tips are really clean and remove any earlier glue ‘splurges’ first!
) Once the muzzle was dry, the top two blue dotted tabs located into the forehead slot and the single tab under the chin went into the slot down there. There’s enough room inside the head to be able to press the glued tabs against the inside of the head with fingertips. With the muzzle firmly glued in place the kitten gains a slightly pointed ‘catcat’ shape to his face as shown in
Photo 20.
In the next installment, adding the ears and then moving on to the front legs.
Until then, keep well to All and Happy Modelling!
Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
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