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Stunning Britannic model

Posted: 2005-04-01 09:45am
by Firefox
I wish I could take credit for it: Link.

Aside from research, he spent only three months building it. Considering the level of detail, I'm amazed.

Posted: 2005-04-01 03:36pm
by JME2
Lovely. Gotta love the Olympic-class liners... 8)

Posted: 2005-04-01 06:34pm
by Frank Hipper
That's really sweet, but I think if he'd portrayed some of his rust streaks as soot, and with a lighter touch, the weathering would have come off better.

It's always best to err on the side of light touch when weathering a model.

Posted: 2005-04-01 06:43pm
by Firefox
There should've been soot around the coaling doors, yes, but she really did get that rusty towards the end of her career. Look here.

Posted: 2005-04-02 06:39am
by Mange
JME2 wrote:Lovely. Gotta love the Olympic-class liners... 8)
Yes, I really like the design. I'm sure that the Titanic (and the Britannic for that matter) would have lasted just as long as the Olympic (1911-1935) if it hadn't been for that iceberg.

That model is absolutely beautiful! Nice details.

Posted: 2005-04-02 04:24pm
by Frank Hipper
Firefox wrote:There should've been soot around the coaling doors, yes, but she really did get that rusty towards the end of her career. Look here.
Well, my point is that coal fired ships generate huge amounts of soot; general naval practise of the time dictated that funnel bases were often painted black except while on "parade" to lessen the effect.
This soot was scrubbed from decks on a daily basis, but that meant it was flushed overboard through the various scuppers, leaving streaks.

Posted: 2005-04-03 11:40am
by Robert Walper
*drools* I need to get a Titanic model again...a big one. 8)