- Member since
March 2007
- From: Portsmouth, RI
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Posted by searat12
on Friday, January 9, 2009 9:37 AM
I've had to think about this one for some time, and i think I have to agree with the 1/700 scale warships as the most influential for several reasons.... First, these were the first kits that made a real effort at proper scaling and accuracy, which lifted the ship-modelling world out of the 'toys, products for kids,' realm, into serious scale modelling. They were also the first to really make an effort at producing a very wide variety of subjects to a common scale, and were of a size suitable not just for individual display, but the waterline design made them perfect for dioramas, and the relatively small scale meant several ships could be reasonably put in the same diorama. As a result, a variety of different modelling techniques were brought to focus on a single subject (diorama techniques, water techniques, weathering, etc, etc.) which really ended up removing the whole genre from the 'bathtub toys' of previous ship models. Yes, Airfix made a stab at it with their 1/600 kits, but they really didn't produce the kind of variety that would really concentrate the 'artistes,' and of course, being full-hull models were not really suitable for diorama work. Note, I personally PREFER full hull models, but I can certainly recognize and understand the interest in waterline subjects (which is why I am so pleased with the modern production runs of ship models which allow both full-hull AND waterline!).
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