I'm inching closer to completion with the double build on the Hikawa Marus. The Cruise Liner is complete, the Hospital Ship needs touching up in several places, but they both basically look the part now.
I've had major problems doing all the tiny windows/portholes. I soon discovered that paint on either a fine brush or toothpick was hopeless, so I then had to repaint over, and have finally found permanent marker pens do a slightly better job. It all still looks pretty wonky, and I would only give it 3 out of 10 for neatness, but I just don't have a clue how to do little windows/portholes neatly!
Doesn't really matter about the portholes, as I am working towards a two-ship diorama, and so I am hoping that people will tend to be distracted by the overall pair of ships on the water and might overlook the many little blemishes that are there in this very tiny, fiddly scale of 1/700.
The major problem I encountered with the black-hulled peacetime cruise liner is that the sides of the hull were all black up to the top of the bridge. Yet the artwork on the box, and all photos I could find of the Hikawa Maru, definitely had the upper third of these sides of the ship in white. So I then had to mask, prime and spray the upper third. The all-white hospital ship is an easier build overall, mostly for that reason. The hardest thing on both ships was all the portholes.
This isn't the finished diorama by any means. I plan to add wakes etc for each ship, but this is just to show the basic idea.
From this angle you can see how the Mod Podge water effects look decidedly watery.
My biggest mistake with these builds is that I was undecided about whether to paint before or after assembling, and I chose the wrong option when it came to the decks in particular. If I was to build these again I would definitely paint as much as possible first, then assemble the ship much later in the piece. (You live and learn!)
The positives I am taking out of the whole enjoyable experience are that I am now a lot more comfortable with using Super Glue (both thin and medium types) and I do find they helped to make it easier to work with all the extremely tiny, fiddly pieces in these kits.
As for the Hasegawa kits themselves, they are some of the best plastic kits I have worked on so far in my first 20 months of building models. All the problems I encountered were entirely down to my inexperience and general clumsiness. Everything fitted together well, the decals went on very nicely and fitted well (although you do need to take care with the green stripes on the sides of the hospital ship, and the spacing between the two red crosses and the green stripes, so it all fits neatly, without either falling short or being too long). The instructions could be a bit more detailed, and you're on own when it comes to colours (if you can't read Japanese) but there are so many reference pix of these kits as build models it wasn't a problem for me.
I'll post some final pictures of the two-ship diorama when it's finished (in a few days from now).