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Now, for the top bit of the main mast. This
is not so hard as what has been done before.
Add glue to the end of the main topsail yardarm. Knot and pull.
Add glue to the end of the main topsail yardarm. Knot and pull.
Cross over and go around the mizzen mast. At
the top of the top ratlines, do not go through the ratline like I did.
The wrong way
The wrong way
The right way
Go to the opposite side main topgallant
yardarm. The next one up from the one you started with. Add glue to the arm,
pull and loop around the arm.
Go to the top of the mast. Add glue to the
mast, pull and loop around the mast.
Go to the opposite side of the topgallant
yardarm. Add glue to the arm, pull and loop around the arm.
Go back to the mizzen mast. At the same
place as before, go round the mizzen mast on the opposite side you have just
done.
Go to the opposite main topsail yardarm.
Add glue to the end of the arm, pull and loop around the arm. NOTE: You
must pass through the best way you can round the standing and running rigging
you have done before.
Go up behind the topgallant sail and around
the front of the mast.
Go down behind the opposite
side of the topgallant sail.
You should be back at the point you started
this from. Add glue to the arm, pull and loop around the arm. That is the main
mast done.
So,
there is one more mast to do. The space to work in is the smallest, but you
know now what's what.
So we are coming to the end of this “thread”.
I have two problems, the space between the mizzen and the main mast and the
rigging you have already done. You must weave the thread through the rigging as
best you can. Do a bit at a time and see how it lays. I find I must pull the
thread out and go a different way a number of times. By this time you will be
better at handling the thread, so it is not so hard as you think. And remember that
British ships are different from other nations. As this is a Russian ship that
is the way I'm going, but I will talk about the British ships later.
Knot thread to mizzen
topsail yardarm pull and add glue.
Go forward to the opposite side main mast
between the mast and ratline at the fighting top and then go under the maintop
sail.
Go around the main mast and back under the
standing rigging and maintop again. This time go on the outside of the rat line
to the crossjack. Add glue to the arm, pull, loop thread around arm.
Go up behind the mizzen topsail and around
the mizzen mast and down the opposite side. Add glue to the crossjack, pull and
loop around the arm.
Go forward to the main mast, going on
opposite side and the outside of the ratlines go under the maintop sail and
standing rigging again. Go under the maintop and back between the mast and rat
line. Go up to the mizzen topsail yardarm. Add glue to the arm, pull and loop
around arm.
Go up behind the mizzen topgallant, around
the front of the mizzen mast.
Going behind the topgallant again then back
to where we started this run. Add glue to the arm, pull and loop around arm.
Knot, pull and glue to the mizzen
topgallant yardarm.
Go to the main mast opposite side and under
the main topgallant sail and the top and standing rigging.
Back to the opposite mizzen topgallant
yardarm. Add glue to arm, pull and loop around arm.
Go to the top of the mast. Add
glue to the top of the mast and loop around. TIP: If the standing
rigging is loose wrap the thread around it too, to tighten it.
Going back to the start of this run, add
glue to the arm, pull and loop around arm.
Cut
away extra thread and the main part is done.
So, this is the rigged ship.
As said before the British
are different. I have no British ships to rig. I will try to tell you how!
The British rigged the mizzen mast back to the top arm of the spanker. I rigged the Russian ships mizzen mast in two runs. Two arms: one arm the crossjack and the mizzen topsail, and one arm the mizzen topgallant.
The British rigged the mizzen mast back to the top arm of the spanker. I rigged the Russian ships mizzen mast in two runs. Two arms: one arm the crossjack and the mizzen topsail, and one arm the mizzen topgallant.
For the British, only do
the crossjack like the Russian one, to the main mast. For the next two arms,
topsail and topgallant do as for the Russian ship but go the end of the spanker
top yardarm instead. Start at the topgallant; go to the spanker and glue. From
the spanker, go to the topsail yardarm and glue (the one below). Go up behind
the sail, around and down the opposite side, glue etc. and back to the spanker
and glue. Go to the opposite topgallant yardarm, glue etc. Go to the top of the
mast and glue. And back to the start of the run and glue.
I Added glue all around the ship’s bottom
and glued it to the base. I have added paint to the sails to cover the thread
at the bottom of the course and jib sails.
I made a jig for flag rigging. A piece of
flat wood and two nails. It is long enough to do two flags.
I tied running rigging thread to the jig
with a single loop knot at each nail.
Cut out the flag, which I downloaded from
this site. fold it in half and lay it through the thread.
Use paper glue and stick it down.
When dry, undo the knots
and take off the jig.
I added a spot of super glue to the top
spanker arm. Making sure the flag is in the right way (to the bow) and as high
as you can. Loop the thread around the arm about 2 times.
Wait a minute or two. Add glue to the bottom
arm of the spanker. Pull and loop around the arm two times.
When dry, cut off the extra thread. I then
re-paint the yardarm ends over the rigging, and around the tops where the rigging
shows and looks wrong. (The running rigging more so).
The last bit is to remove the shiny bits
left by the glue and not painted over: The thread around the bow and bow sprit,
top and bottom of the rat-lines, and around the joint of the hull and the base.
Paint over these places with a Matt varnish.
So we have gone from this.
To this.
She now sails off to join the rest of my
Russian Fleet.
If you have been with me from the start of
this guide, you will know I started with one ship and finished with a second
one. So to finish off this guide I have added here the finished first ship.
My
wish is this guide will give you the push, to have a go yourself.
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This ends Rory's guide to painting and rigging 1/1200 ships. In the future from time to time I will post more of Rory's tips and, with his permission, some of his work.
4 comments:
wow - these are fantastic - thanks for posting
This is a great guide, thanks for posting it. I have a few Dutch ships I haven't worked up the bravery to do yet and this has given me a bit of a push.
Mike C,
There are several Dutch ships here on the site. The fleet is made up of Navwar, Davco, and Langton models.
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