- Member since
May 2003
- From: Greenville, NC
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Posted by jtilley
on Tuesday, December 19, 2006 9:19 AM
In addition to the Revell Constitution, the same company's Cutty Sark, Thermopylae, United States, Alabama, and Kearsarge come with sets of twenty 1/96-scale crew figures. Those in the United States are identical to the Constitution set; the others are civilians. Given the casual approach to naval uniforms in 1805, though, they can easily be pressed into service.
Several European companies make lines of figures for HO model railroads. Those by the German firm Preiser are especially nice. They're advertised as being on 1/90 scale, but they actually vary somewhat in height; some of them are, in fact, just about six feet tall on 1/100 scale. If you have a well-stocked model railroad-oriented hobby shop in your neighborhood, it's worth checking out.
It sticks in my mind that somebody in this Forum linked us, a year or so ago, to a series of soft-plastic European figures (made in either France or Belgium, I think) that actually did represent sailors and marines from the Napoleonic Wars. I'm not sure of the scale; it may have been the traditional wargamers' 1/76, which would be noticeably too big. Can any European members jog my memory?
I don't recommend trying to make furled sails (or any other kind of sails on 1/100 scale) out of cloth. It's physically impossible to find cloth that's the right thickness and consistancy; if such a material could be located, it would be transparent. We took up the topic of furled sails some time ago here in the Forum. Here's a link: /forums/350916/ShowPost.aspx
Hope that helps a little. Good luck.
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.
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