Lastly there was railing and rigging. I used WEM generic railings and ladders on Maury. Shigure's railing came from Tom's. The rigging was an education. For Maury I tried a braided monofilament that promised good strength and small diameter. As a fisherman I should have known what would happen. Because braided line gets its strength because its a bonded braid of several lines, it was almost impossible to trim. It also was no thinner than 2lb mono – too big for 1/700. So I pulled it all off and rigged Maury again with X7 fly fishing tippet which is about .1mm in diameter and 50 denier. I used the same material for some of Shigure. Then I decided to try to use the 20 denier Uni-Caenis line recommended by Mr. Griffith after past failures. Because the stuff is so thin it lacks tactile feel completely which makes it very hard to direct. (It's also extremely hard to see: I broke out 3.75 reading glasses and worked with my nose in the funnel. I did have an epiphany. I put a piece of white typing paper behind the ship and presto I could see the line – sometimes.) However, I found that if there were attachment points that the line had one huge advantage: once in a simple slip knot, it will tighten completely with very little pressure. If a knot can hold both ends, one is really home free. I did use rubber cement although I'd guess thinned white glue would be just as good. A mini-drop of CA also went on. There is very little residue in attachment so a lot of connections can be made near the same spot. Because of my braided line calamity I bought a pair of Dr. Slick Razor Scissors which are beyond sharp. I've never seen anything like them and trimming was possible with more precision than I'm used to. So about 2/3ds of Shigure is rigged with Uni. It appears to me that rigging line is not all the same thickness regardless so it looks fine. To make matters better, it appears that the warm incense tightens the Uni: it certainly does the tippet mono. Anyway, in future I'll be thinking of installing attachment points during the build process to employ much later when rigging. It is this kind of advance planning that has taken me a long time to learn in ship modeling.
Below are some more pics. The last one is a photo to show how tiny these things are, but instead of using a quarter for comparison, I parked both ships under the wings of my 1/48 build of the wonderful Accurate Miniatures TBM dressed in Atlantic service uniform.
Eric