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Hi Ya,ll; General Comments About the drive to Model

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  • Member since
    August 2020
  • From: Lakes Entrance, Victoria, Australia.
Posted by Dodgy on Wednesday, October 7, 2020 3:09 AM

Thats looking great Philo! I've never built a vacform, but I'm going to have a crack at a 32nd scale Boomerang for a group build. Its a fairly uncomplicated type of aircraft so hopeffully the build won't be too taxing and I'll be able to complete it.

I long to live in a world where chickens can cross the road without having their motives questioned

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Thursday, October 1, 2020 4:56 AM

Hey! Philo, is that the ARADO ? Great progress!

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Thursday, October 1, 2020 4:55 AM

You know;

     Funny you should say that. I prefer to use bottle glue but a great portion of my models are hand painted, Not Airbrushed. I achieve a mix that covers well but brushes where there's No Brushmarks( Remember Pactra? )

  • Member since
    March 2005
Posted by philo426 on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 7:38 PM

  • Member since
    March 2005
Posted by philo426 on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 7:37 PM

Well my Dad enjoyed the big(to me at the time!)Revell 1/32 Spitfire ,Hurricane,and 109 kits!From the age of 4 or 5 I was hooked !55 now and still at it!Latest victim is the 1/32 Vac Form I.D. models AR-234.Sometimes you have to punish yourself! I always enjoyed Tinkertoys,Lincoln logs and Erector sets !

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 4:25 PM

wpwar11

 

Side note-I'm trying to get my dad to sign up here.  His model sailing ships are incredible. 

 

Oh, please do. We have a very active model ship builder group here. Leaving myself out of course, we have some of the best in the hobby.

 

Bill

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    January 2020
  • From: Maryland
Posted by wpwar11 on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 3:35 PM

Hey Tank

I'm really happy we were able to build that Spitfire.  I'm looking forward to future projects with him.  Its really funny as we have completely different build philosophies.  He still uses the Testors tube glue and hand paints everything.  Just goes to show you the many ways a modeler can get results.

paul.

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 6:38 AM

Hi Wpwar11:

     Just a little side note. My Dad and I did get closer as he aged. His favorite model of all times was the " Santa Maria" Of Columbus fame. He had them all sizes all over the house. Drove Mom2 to distraction!

  • Member since
    January 2020
  • From: Maryland
Posted by wpwar11 on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 7:34 PM

I always thought plastic models were neat.  I started building them around 7 or 8.  I remember AMT and Monogram kits the most.  Airplanes and cars occupied the kitchen table throughout my childhood.  I also enjoyed the Estes rockets.  I'm sure this fascination with models started with my father.  He would build an occasional kit and I would watch as he would build a masterpiece.  I always had toys that recquired a building element.  

Then a funny thing happened.  Around 14 or so I just stopped.  That might be common with some of us.  I read how new members to this forum leave the hobby around this age.  In my twenties and thirties I would go to the occasional hobby shop but never made a purchase.  I always wanted the great finished models like I remember my father building.  It just didn't click.  I just wasn't motivated enough.  Fast forward to last fall at age 49 and I decided to purchase a model plane.  Bought tools and paints and went to work.  I fell in love again with the hobby .  I watch countless build videos and read magazines and of course get advice here.  Wonder why now was the right time?  

Great story.  I know this thread isn't so much about this but recently I called my dad to tell him I started building models again.  As a boy we never really built a model together. He told me since he retired years ago he builds model sail boats and an occasional plane. I suggested we do a build.  I bought two Spitfires and sent him one.  Nearly every night we would email or talk about the various build stages.  The hobby really brought us much closer together.  

Side note-I'm trying to get my dad to sign up here.  His model sailing ships are incredible.  I do think my Spitfire came out nicer than his. LOL.

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Towson MD
Posted by gregbale on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 6:33 PM

The highlights of my 'building' arc, in roughly chronological order:

Blocks

Lincoln logs

Tinker toys

Girder-and-panel sets

Erector sets

Hawk dime-store plastic models

Scratchbuilt Starship Enterprise from paper plates and paper towel tubes [not exactly to scale, but it looked awesome!]

Monogram and Revell show cars and Tom Daniel creations

Revell 'box scale' ships

Monogram 80-cent WW2 planes

Guillow balsa & tissue WW1 fighters

Revell 1/28 WW1 and 1/32 WW2

PAPER model ships

Plastic

Plastic

Plastic....

I haven't done balsa since the '80s. Still enjoy paper now and then, as well as "everything including the kitchen sink" mixed-media scratchbuilding [I used to build industrial models semi-professionally]...but styrene is the one that's 'in the blood.' The appeal has never faded, and the mental list of 'some day' projects has spiraled well beyond several lifetimes.

Greg

George Lewis:

"Every time you correct me on my grammar I love you a little fewer."
 
  • Member since
    August 2020
  • From: Lakes Entrance, Victoria, Australia.
Posted by Dodgy on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 5:47 PM

A friend of mine had some of the Penguin balsa wood models as well as some of the early airfix kits and I was hooked. Never had any of the construction sets, but have always been interested in things in minature. As a child I was always playing with toy soldiers.

Rob F

I long to live in a world where chickens can cross the road without having their motives questioned

  • Member since
    September 2004
  • From: Denver
Posted by tankboy51 on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 1:22 PM

For me, it's plastic models only.  I have no interest or talent for balsa wood model aircraft or wooden boats. My first plastic model was in the 1950's sometime of the Strombecker model of the USS Ruderow, odd  how I remeber that.  It made a huge impression on me.  I was 6 or 7 years old.  I didn't see how to apply the decals on, so I glued them on with tube glue.  What a mess, but I loved it.  Soon later my dad told me that I needed to use water!  He was in the US navy during WW 2 and I was very impressed with him, as was my brother.  He also was a Dentist, later a Professor in a University, great man.  Very skilled.  My dad also bought us our first model of Monogram 1/48 Wildcats and Dauntless in 1959 then the Revel USS Essex. I have a cousin who served on it in the early 1960s or so.

I never stoped building, my painting skilles improved, I joined IPMS 44 years ago, won a few contests, I still build.  I still have meetings, on line, with IPMS.  My brother, who lives across country, has retired, is getting back into modeling, takes advice from me.  It's fun to do things with him again. 

I did Lincoln logs,  heck, we lived in South East Iowa, my family lived in Illinois, Lincoln contry,  went to his old house many times.  I was no good at Erector sets, I was bad at shop, actually, hated shop . I was  Okay at art.  Best at Science and History, became surveyor and taught some Geology at Dinosaur Ridge. 

I loved plastic models. I never stopped building models like others.  I remember when I was going into 7th grade that if I keep building, that I will probably never stop.   Then there was all the various Avalon Hills war games, especially Panzer Blitz.. Wow, the best combined.  Way before computer games became popular.  I guess I'm a major nerd.  Oh yes, I'm in Star Fleet, on the USS Pioneer, NCC 5280 D,  get it?

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 1:13 PM

Lincoln Logs, wood blocks, Erector Sets, some sort of plastic building set that had red beams and columns like Plastruct, with little dovetails on the ends.

Tinker toys.

That's me in the braces;

 Modeling does impress the women...

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    December 2018
Posted by Tosh on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 12:41 PM

As for myself, I had the oppurtunity  to build WWII Aircraft as my father used to purchase them for me.  This was the mad frenzy days for me.  The Monogram Revell builds.  I really enjoyed the Monogram kits.  I recall my favorite kit that I must have built 3x's.  The Monogram 1/48 F4U Corsair as it was a big deal for me back then!  I could never get the wing to fold and unfold.  I had to get 2 popsicle sticks as braces and used the Testors glue to an excess.  Lol! 

I was a "Baa Baa Blacksheep" TV series fanatic.  Robert Conrad played Major Greg "Pappy" Boyington.  My dad and I used to watch the Blacksheep Squadron program religiously.  

Another Monogram Kit that I recall building very fondly was the F6F Hellcat, F4F Wildcat, and the P-38 Lightning!  There were 2 other Monogram kits that was a Huey Chopper and the Huey Cobra.

My all time favorite was the 1/48 B-24J Liberator made by Monogram.  It came with a little tractor to pull the Liberator around.   I built the Liberator kits twice.  Oh yes, also the P-51 Mustang and the cool looking Black Widow!  All by Monogram.

At one point, my dad mentioned that I needed to build different types of models so I chose the Wright Brothers Flyer.  I recall building the Revell Blacksheep Corsair and other Revell kits.  But my favorite kit company was Monogram!

Your friend's, Toshi and Ezra

 

Reside in Streetsboro, Ohio

 

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Hi Ya,ll; General Comments About the drive to Model
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Tuesday, September 29, 2020 11:47 AM

No, The general is not going to comment, Just me:

      Did you know that many of us didn't even know we would be drawn into this hobby? We were probably fair to good at art in school, then maybe not. Maybe we just liked to build things. But how? maybe building little forts out of twigs or popsicle sticks. Maybe we were lucky enough to have LEGO sets.

     Did You? I had the usual, Lincoln Logs, Tinker Toy sets, and American Plastic Bricks. Didn't get into LEGO except as a source for some parts that could be used for something other than what they were designed for.  There was a set of building materials in which you could build buildings many stories tall with floors made of Tile patterned plastic sheet. I don't remember their name. Let's not forget Erector Sets!

      Now along came summer camp (I wonder how long Dad and Mom saved for that!)That's when I met COMET products! I didn't have a craft project so the Counselor gave me a Comet solid airplane model kit. Oh Boy, that let the cat out of the bag. I had to have another. There goes my allowance. All of a dollar. Well, they sold for about fifty cents back then.

     Someone invented plastic models. Now I had to learn about work! Yeah Work, Mowing lawns and walking dogs and going to the grocery store for neighbors and thereby earning model money. Hey a REVELL model! Hmmm. 98 cents. Well, with two bottles of paint, brush and a tube of glue. A whole Buck and a Half. I am good to go.

     Is that the way it was with you? I still get excited about certain new models , no matter what the Media is! I may not be able to acquire them, but my curiosity is definitely aroused. Now, comes the question. What was it that caused me to get hooked? How about You? I would like to hear your thoughts on the subject.

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