Well said, Tanker Builder.
For me, Sheperd Paine exemplified the master modeler's craft.
To build, and do so in an age with no Internet, when research meant phone calls, trips to museums, libraries, military bases, and correspondence with archivists and historians. To create from scratch, when the kit component was inaccurate, or non-existent. To look at a household item, or broken appliance, and make history come alive using its innards. To bring color and action to life in three dimensions, with plastic, resin, paints, oils, washes, wood and scrap.
To tell a story, such as the last moments of the BonHomme Richard, fatally wounded in its battle with the Serapis, or the moment of discovery in a distant desert, of a long-lost Liberator, and the resolution of its crew's fate. Or taking us all back in history, to the gun deck of HMS Victory, at Trafalgar? Or to our own ringside seat at the chart tables of the British Admiralty.
Whether a figure, a shadow box, or a super-diorama, Mr. Paine built with excellence, passion, and real fun. And couldn't have been a nicer guy about it.
And then to teach us how to do it. To do so with good humor, an eye for detail, and a willingness to share his experiences with us.
Baseball had Derek Jeter. Hockey had Wayne Gretzky. Cooking had Julia Child. And we were fortunate enough-nay-blessed to have Sheperd Paine.
Thanks, good sir, for all the history you've shown us, the techniques you taught us, and the creative spark you inspired in us that make this hobby great.
Rest easy, Shep- and well done.