Finlay on the water for the first time in her history!
The restoration and conversion to radio controlled sailing of "Kathleen".Based on "Kathleen and May"
Sunday, 15 May 2016
Sunday, 8 May 2016
Wednesday, 13 April 2016
Rudder and wheel
I have put a small servo in the wheel house so the wheel moves with the rudder, why?, because I can!
Monday, 11 April 2016
Kathgleen gets a keel.
Kathleen was built as a static model without sails, now she will will be sailing on the water with sail she will need to have a keel to stop her from, well, keeling over.
Saturday, 9 April 2016
Friday, 1 April 2016
Wednesday, 10 February 2016
Sunday, 7 February 2016
Thursday, 4 February 2016
Sunday, 10 January 2016
A lot of progress was made during the Christmas holiday although things have slowed down due to me being unwell with some condition called acute rinosinusitis which has given e a crippling caugh and the inability to sleep for more than a couple of hours at a time.
Still a lot was done on Kathleen including fitting the motor and the rest of the radio. The hull painting only needs a couple of varnish coats and the sills are almost fitted. A few other things were done and I can start to see how she will look complete.
The sails from Rod Carr sails fit a treat and will look great, because Kathleen will be powered she will be fitted with a reduced rig.
Still a lot was done on Kathleen including fitting the motor and the rest of the radio. The hull painting only needs a couple of varnish coats and the sills are almost fitted. A few other things were done and I can start to see how she will look complete.
The sails from Rod Carr sails fit a treat and will look great, because Kathleen will be powered she will be fitted with a reduced rig.
Monday, 28 December 2015
Wednesday, 23 December 2015
1:24 scale figures.
Adding a crew to Kathleen will add a bit of life, a moving model boats looks like a ghost ship without figures. Finding 1:24 scale figures isn't too difficult but they tend to be made from resin or plastic and you need to tweak them into the pose you want. I have made many pose-able armatures for stop motion figures and so it made sense to make pose-able armatures for Kathleen's crew. First you need the right height which is between 65mm and 75mm.
I then made a wire frame using solder wire which I bound in places with brass wire. Once I made the frame I filled it out with more solder wire. the armature is now ready for coating with a latex build up then clothes which I will make from tissue paper.
The following stages show how he was made.
The basic wire armature.
The filled out frame.
You can now pose the figure
He's waving!
He even has a head!
The figure is then coated with latex and clothed using tissue. I will post the finished figure soon!
Here is a larger figure I made using wire and brass, this one is 1:6 scale and was used in a stop- motion short.
The armature under clothes, instead of latex build up I've used foam.
Ready to hold any pose.
On set.
You can watch a video clip of the puppet in action here:
A finished film I made using puppet wire armatures.
THE CREW.
The first crew member will be based on the one of the crew to Tommy Jewell who skippered and owned Kathleen and May in the 1950's.
Iv'e chose this era because the boat still looked quite Edwardian and also because I love what the crew were wearing in the 50's
Tommy Jewell
The crew member i am modeling.
I love the berry ,baggy clothes and shirt creases.
Unpainted crew member
Striking a pose, fore-arms and hands to be finished.
Having a seat.
With finished hands and fore-arms.
All done and painted, I've kept the detail simple, the latex makes for a very glossy finish which I'll dull up later with a mat varnish.
Luckily I had an old box brownie with out of date colour film in my wardrobe so we can compare the model to the real guy fairly well :)
And finally ( I promise ) having a row.
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