Hi;
I don't think they are less popular . There is this though .If you look around what do you have ? Supply ships and one Box boat ( the Colombo Express ) in 1/700 . The size - 1/700 , and what's available are killers for lots of folks .
The selection is indeed small even to Tugs , Coast Guard patrol craft and of course Tankers and Passenger ships ( those since 1960 ) . Even the old ones are hard to find . Of course there's those ugly Hotels on Barges ( my term for the newest (liners ? )
The really beautiful liners and freighters are almost non - existant .
Now other civilian craft , if you want them , are available as large Wooden Wonders . That means ( I Wonder if I can build that , it's Wood .) They aren't cheap either and don't fit the new style mantels anyway .They are too big as a rule .
That's how I got into building paper models .Trouble there is , most are models of European ships and boats . Very little for the American Merchant service . That's how Tanker - Builder as a handle came about .
I use a technique borrowed from paper and build Tankers , Freighters , Liners , workboats and motoryachts , and everything that floats , that way . Also they are either railroad scales ( 1/160( " N " scale , 1/87 ( H.O. scale) 1/48 ( "O " scale ) and once in a while , 1/72 scale .
The interest seems to be in those objects that make war on the high seas .Whether the Age of Sail or Modern .There are few Clippers , Whalers or plain old cargo ships from the Age of Sail . Once in a while in the odd scales you will get a smattering of Civilian stuff from Japan or China , mostly ships you've never heard of . Those are all modern too or at least within the last twenty years .
Revell used to do some nice ships like the S.S.United States , Oriana and Canberra from P and O and the Brasil/Brazil - Argentina , from Moore - Mc Cormack lines . And of course the ubiquitis "Hawaiian Pilot " a Post war " Stick Ship " ( a Merchant Term ) employed by Matson Navigation , who also operated the Mariposa , Monterey and the Matsonia and Lurline cruise ships , and the Nuclear Freighter Savannah operator unknown . Must not forget the Queens ( Mary and Elizabeth ) done by both Revell and Otaki with a smattering from other companies .
Hmmm . That's it .
They had an old 50s era Chris Craft Tri-Cabin for years and even though it didn't happen , turned it into a " Sport Fisherman " ( no Way in real life ! ) . Years ago OTAKI had a 40' Coast Guard Inland patrol craft . OTAKI is the company which did the modern ships no one ever heard of . From molds of the same ( motorized for the domestic market ) in Japan . All 1/400 except the patrol boat at 1/32 scale .
So If you don't want to do Paper or Scratch - Build , you are kind of limited on what you can get , if you can even find it . I forgot to mention Lindberg's offerings in work boats and yachts very large , except for the Chris Craft 30' express Cruiser ( a small Thirties / Forties cabin cruiser . It came Motorized and Non-Motorized ). they originally , Except the " Chris Craft Constellation " started life as PYRO kits many eons ago it seems .
So there you have it . Except the " Hemi Hydro " and the hard to find " Bass Boat from Ranger " ( Two versions , by Revell ) there isn't much out there . Sorry but it's true . That's why ship modelers search like detectives at model shows where there are a lot of vendors . Trouble is , the price may equal or exceed what you would pay for a new kit of the U.S.S. North Carolina from Trumpeter , $ 225.00 with P.E.
Don't let closeness to water fool you though . There are very many folks crazy about ships and boats that have never dipped a toe in either coast's salty waters ! I have friends from Montana who are just bonkers about the old Liners from the forties and fifties ! Tanker - Builder