SEARCH FINESCALE.COM

Enter keywords or a search phrase below:

Your first model?

5572 views
63 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    February 2016
  • From: Ice coated north 40 saskatchewan
Your first model?
Posted by German Armour on Thursday, November 24, 2022 7:26 PM

Thought I'd share a fun story I have about my first model I built.

 

When I was 10 or so, I bought a AMT A-4 skyhawk from the salvation army,  I remember being super excited, but, had to mow the lawn first:)  It was a hot summer day and remember using the red testors tube glue. Sadly the model is long gone.

Happy to discover which model it was, a thread over on HS, a guy built one.

 

What's your first model you remember building?

 Never give up, never quit, never stop modelling.Idea

 

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Western North Carolina
Posted by Tojo72 on Thursday, November 24, 2022 7:51 PM

As a kid,with my father,Aurora's Godzilla

As an adult,when I restarted in early my 20's it was Tamiya's Panzer IV handpainted Gray with a whitewash

  • Member since
    May 2011
  • From: Honolulu, Hawaii
Posted by Real G on Thursday, November 24, 2022 7:54 PM

Revell USS Pittsburgh, brush painted with Testors chrome silver and flat black.  I started and finished in one afternoon, sitting on the dining room floor (protected with an old newspaper of course).  That was back in 1970.

I also remember when my dad came home, he told me that the real ship lost its bow in a storm, but made it safely back to port.

“Ya ya ya, unicorn papoi!”

  • Member since
    June 2017
  • From: Winter Park, FL
Posted by fotofrank on Thursday, November 24, 2022 8:03 PM

This is the very first model I ever built. My dad bought it for me. I think I was 10 years old. We had probably just watched Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo on Channel 4 in St. Louis. Back then, the kit was made by Revell. Now that Atlantis has re-released the kit, I plan to have this kit on the shelf very soon.

OK. In the stash: Way too much to build in one lifetime...

  • Member since
    September 2020
Posted by fearlessfarless on Friday, November 25, 2022 1:39 AM

My mother took me to the local Five and Dime store to pick out a gift for my dad when I was about five years old. The moment I saw the Darrell Waltrip Tide car in amongst all the other stuff in the store, I KNEW that was the thing to buy. Our family didn't watch Nascar, but the colors jumped off the box to a five year old boy.

I had obviously never built models at that age, and I don't think he had ever built one either, but we sat together at the kitchen table with a tube of Testors glue and put that thing together one night. No side cutters, no masking, no paint, just plastic and glue. Eventually, we even got the decals on.

After years of being proudly displayed, the old kit met its end. By that time my interest in models had grown, and I salvaged the tires and wheels. They've bounced around different kits and projects ever since. (As you can tell from the Goodyear decals)

I just recently picked up  another Darrell Waltrip car on eBay and plan on building it as soon as my current project wraps. Of course, I hope with a little more skill this time around. Heck, I might even put that set of wheels and tires from the first model kit on it...

  • Member since
    June 2017
  • From: Winter Park, FL
Posted by fotofrank on Friday, November 25, 2022 7:01 AM

This thread is terrific! I hope a lot more folks come on board and share their stories.

OK. In the stash: Way too much to build in one lifetime...

  • Member since
    March 2022
  • From: Twin cities, MN
Posted by missileman2000 on Friday, November 25, 2022 7:23 AM

Friends and relative started giving me model airplane kits when I was about five. But I could not read the intruction well enough to build the kits. They were all stick and tissue flying models.  Finally, when I was seven, I completed one, a Guillows Aerona.  Never got it to fly, but soon I did get others to fly.  I was hooked.

Dad found the first plastic model a few years later, a P-80. I think it was a Hawk kit.  From the on I built everything- freeflight, control-line, and RC, and plastic models.  When I moved to Minnesota, I found that the weather was not conducive for flying models, and began concentrating on plastic.  Been building for 76 years now.

 

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Friday, November 25, 2022 10:17 AM

My first model was a Pyro Brontosaurus kit, built with my dad. Thinking back, I'll bet that he built almost all of it, with me helping however I could. As an adult my first model kit was the Tamiya 1/35 M151A2 gun jeep that I picked up at the AAFES Shopette when I arrived at Ft Polk as a brand new 18 year old infantry Private. That one I decided that I would do all the "advanced" modeler things such as remove mold seam lines and sprue attachment points.

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    October 2016
  • From: .O-H-I-O....
Posted by DasBeav on Friday, November 25, 2022 10:39 AM

My first model was a F-100 Super Sabre bought on a fourth grade field trip to COSI in Ohio. No idea who made it, very small, at least 1/100 scale. The first kit that got me back to building as an "adult" was the Revellogram P-61 out of the bargain bin at a DrugMart. Somewhere in my mid forties...

 Sooner Born...Buckeye Bred.

 

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: USA
Posted by keavdog on Friday, November 25, 2022 11:58 AM

Mine was a snap-tite Tom Daniel kit when I was 7.  

Never really stopped building since then- though there were a couple pauses.

Thanks,

John

  • Member since
    July 2012
  • From: Douglas AZ
Posted by littletimmy on Friday, November 25, 2022 12:37 PM

I remember building a few snap together kits back in 1970 - 71,  but my first real glue together kit was an AMT 56 Ford I got for my birthday in October of 71 ( I just turned 5 )

I totally mauled that kit, engine parts glued on top of the hood, windshield recieved my now trademark thumb print, lost interior parts, and I didn't cut out the x in the open doorways ( I thought they were supposed to be there as part of the roll cage.)

As for the paint, ... brushed on Navy Blue EVERYWHERE.( except the trunk which I left bare White plastic as well as the interior.... I couldn't  figure out how to paint the interior with it already assembled.) This was also the kit that my grandfather taught me to use Gasoline as a paint thinner..... something that was necessary  on the farm because trips into town were rare. ( I finally got to use real paint thinner a kit or two later.)

 

I then proceeded  to put colored  3 ring binder re-enforcement circles all over it.

My dad called it the " Fruit-Loop funnycar".

It suffered my usual " experimental " fireworks accident.

I have since then gotten another one from the 1971 issue, but haven't done anything with it .... except  sniff the 50 year old plastic  ... AAAAAAHHHHHH !!!!

 Dont worry about the thumbprint, paint it Rust , and call it "Battle Damage"

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Friday, November 25, 2022 12:59 PM

I don't remember exactly, but my first models included the Disneyland space rocket, the visible man, and a number of HO Plasticville buildings.

 

Bill

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Friday, November 25, 2022 1:07 PM

The first model kit I remember getting was a 1/32 scale Aurora hot rod hot dog vending truck called "The Wurst". My dad built it for me. I also remember him building an Aurora Patton tank for me too.

The two kits I remember building myself was the Aurora Prehistoric Scenes Saber Toothed Tiger and a Lindberg hot rod car that I put the steering wheel on the wrong side.

One of the oldest model kits I still have is an Aurora MBT70 I built as a young teenager around 1974. I rebuilt it in 1996 using a parts kit I found on eBay. Many of the small bits had been vacuumed up by my mom over the years.

Another old kit I still have is the MPC R2-D2 kit from about 1977. It was very poorly built.

  • Member since
    October 2004
  • From: Orlando, Florida
Posted by ikar01 on Friday, November 25, 2022 1:25 PM

As far as I can remember it was the Revell Seamaster when I was five.

  • Member since
    June 2009
Posted by bigbluejavelin on Friday, November 25, 2022 4:26 PM

 My first kit was the Red Baron show rod (first issue), in first grade.

 

  • Member since
    January 2021
Posted by JoeSMG on Friday, November 25, 2022 6:11 PM

great topic, below is straight out of my user profile:

"I've been building models since I was 7ish when my brother bought me two ship models (he let me chose) for my birthday, the Bismarck and Hood. That started me on a lifelong fascination with ships and model building in general."

- Joe the SMG

  • Member since
    November 2018
Posted by oldermodelguy on Saturday, November 26, 2022 7:18 AM

My first kit with some help to fit the cockpit in was some iteration of Korean war era helicopter given to me by an unckle, I was about 8. It was an absolute glue bomb. My interest was more old cars but I built several airplanes along the way and buildings for my American Flyer train set. My second model was I believe made by Aroura, a 1/32 scale kit named 1932 Ford Jalopy. To this day I still keep my eyes open for one just for nastalgia sake. But that one I 100% built myself. The only stand out mistake is I got the front axle in upside down. But had gained control of the glue tube lol ! So it wasn't all marred up with extra glue. How or why the axle was upside down I have no idea. Then came various planes, AMT cars, boats. Stick models etc etc. Painting models started at about 10, by 11 I was spray painting. At 11-1/2 - 12 I won a local hobby store contest in my age category with an AMT 1949 Ford entry that was spray painted gold metallic, had engine wiring and felt upholstered interior.. I was on my way to model madness I think, I lived models. Working doors, suspension, steering. Chopped down coupes with transplanted enginess for circle track racers from stock kits etc.

Then girls and hormones, real cars for a stretch there, took a few years off. But modelers never really quit we're like weebles, we may wobble or fall down but always get up lol !! So I've been building models since 1958ish.

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Bethlehem PA
Posted by the Baron on Saturday, November 26, 2022 8:05 AM

A Model-T, when I was 5.  I remember it as a Lindberg kit, but I may be mistaken.  I put it together with Duco Household Cement and then played with it till it fell apart.

The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2016
  • From: Malvern, PA
Posted by WillysMB on Saturday, November 26, 2022 8:14 AM

I started some 60 yrs ago with stick and tissue, probably Guillows but I remember my first plastic very well - the Revell 1/72 Fokker Eindecker. From there I transitioned to almost all 1/72 plastic. Went through the Revell line, discovered Monograms, then the wonders of Airfix, Heller, and Italerai. Slowed down after grad school but trying to get back in to tackle my somewhat overwhelming stash after I had to pause building but kept buying kits. In a fit of nostalgia, I had an opportunity to acquire the entire line of the series 100 Guilows WWI biplanes - sigh...

  • Member since
    January 2021
Posted by JoeSMG on Saturday, November 26, 2022 9:17 AM

the Baron

... and then played with it till it fell apart.

 

 

The same fate as nearly all my early models. (One was eaten by a dog)

- Joe the SMG

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: On my kitchen counter top somewhere in central North Carolina.
Posted by disastermaster on Saturday, November 26, 2022 4:26 PM

I can't really remember my first kit but when I was about six I can remember building this about 65 years ago.

                       

That was when I realized that white glue just wouldn't work while doing a strafing run.

I've been at it ever since.

 https://i.imgur.com/LjRRaV1.png

 

 

 
  • Member since
    March 2013
Posted by patrick206 on Saturday, November 26, 2022 5:06 PM

When I was eight my Grandmother passed away, we shared a very close relationship. I felt so bad that I recall it clearly today, 74 years later.

My uncle bought me a model to build, hoping it would help me to feel better. That was my first model ever. I'm fairly sure it was an Aurora, going strictly by memory I think it was a Lockheed XC-90 interceptor/fighter, or something close to that.

No paint, just glued together, (some of the glue actually ended up on the model,) but to my eyes it was modeling perfection. I wish I still had it, sadly it was lost on a combat mission, firecrackers were involved.

 

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Towson MD
Posted by gregbale on Saturday, November 26, 2022 6:17 PM

I remember some kind of car and some small jet obtained in a 'Santa's Sack' drawing in Cub Scouts, age 5 or so -- I was 'officially' too young at the time, but since Mom was the den mother, I got to do all the stuff my 2-year-older brother got to do 'on the books.' Dad 'helped' with those...i e., probably actually enjoyed himself once my 5-second gnat's attention span flamed out. Big Smile

First one I remember building by myself was Hawk's cool 1/48 F-104 in its 'Authenti-plated' release, with pre-chromed fuselage parts:

I remember it even gave you the option (which I of course took) of not gluing the seat assembly permanently, allowing the youthful modeler to recreate an 'exciting' feature of the earliest Starfighter prototypes: ejection through the floor of the cockpit, rather than through the canopy. [In my blissful ignorance, I quite 'rationally' assumed this meant the seat module was something akin to a jet-powered air bike. My plucky pilot would exit south...scoot around to do tac recon or some other useful service (while the very smart plane apparently carried on unattended...then rejoin his a/c to finish the mission. (Hey, it worked on Thunderbirds, didn't it?? Embarrassed)]

That shining bird provided reliable air cover for countless backyard 'green army man' battles. Sadly, however, the Starfighter's evil reputation as a 'widowmaker' held true: plane, pilot (and secret jet air bike) suffered a flameout on approach...and all were destroyed in a fiery crash into my sister's 'Barbie's Dream House.' Huh?

There is no 'I' in 'Hero,' gentlemen...

(...but not coincidentally, there are 2 in 'Idiot.' Wink)

Greg

George Lewis:

"Every time you correct me on my grammar I love you a little fewer."
 
  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Bethlehem PA
Posted by the Baron on Monday, November 28, 2022 9:40 AM

JoeSMG
 
the Baron

... and then played with it till it fell apart. 

The same fate as nearly all my early models. (One was eaten by a dog)

 
Yes

The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.

 

 

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Monday, November 28, 2022 10:09 AM

WillysMB
I started some 60 yrs ago with stick and tissue, probably Guillows but I remember my first plastic very well - the Revell 1/72 Fokker Eindecker. From there I transitioned to almost all 1/72 plastic. Went through the Revell line, discovered Monograms, then the wonders of Airfix, Heller, and Italerai

Very much like my modeling as a kid.

 

Bill

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    May 2011
  • From: Honolulu, Hawaii
Posted by Real G on Monday, November 28, 2022 11:20 AM

Me and my friends used to covet any catalog included with the kits we bought.  We would lie on the grass under the shade of a tree in the playground and proclaim what kit we would buy next (allowance money permitting of course).  With the blue sky above, puffy white clouds lazily drifting by, we were free to dream as we pleased.  Heady, carefree days.

“Ya ya ya, unicorn papoi!”

  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: West of the rock and east of the hard place!
Posted by murph on Thursday, December 1, 2022 2:08 PM

A Spitfire back in 1970.  Dad took me to see Battle of Britain and my fixation with airplanes was cemented then.  I don't remember the manufacturer or scale but I seem to think it was 48th scale as it was fairly big (to a young lad) and I know it wasn't 32nd scale.  I probably had it built within half an hour or so of getting it.  The smell of tube glue fumes filled the kitchen and fingerprints abounded on the plastic.  Paint...shmaint.  All I knew is it 'flew' great (with the appropriate and obligatory engine and machine gun sound effects) and it performed many barrel rolls, zoom climbs, dives, split S's and turns as I ran through out the house.  I may do the same thing after I finish a build these days...minus the running part.

Retired and living the dream!

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Thursday, December 1, 2022 2:22 PM

You probably didn't notice Susannah York in a mens dress shirt...

 

Bill

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    February 2011
Posted by GreySnake on Monday, December 5, 2022 6:07 AM
I started building off and on when I was five or six years old and can’t remember what my first kit was. I know it was snaptite car or airplane. I wasn’t that interested in the hobby and preferred Lego’s. It wasn’t till I was nine years old that I bought a Tamiya 1/35 Schwimmwagen and finally stuck with the hobby.
  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: West of the rock and east of the hard place!
Posted by murph on Monday, December 5, 2022 7:21 PM

"You probably didn't notice Susannah York in a mens dress shirt..."

Bill...Stick out tongue  Back then, as a boy under 10, girls were the sworn enemy.  Now...not so much.Big Smile

Retired and living the dream!

JOIN OUR COMMUNITY!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

SEARCH FORUMS
FREE NEWSLETTER
By signing up you may also receive reader surveys and occasional special offers. We do not sell, rent or trade our email lists. View our Privacy Policy.