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Showing posts with label Pfalz bei Kaub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pfalz bei Kaub. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub", PT 8

At first I wasn't going to post anything about the progress but then thought you'all might be interested. The last major step in the project was to put a frame around the perimeter of the base, which I did. BUT, in short I screwed it up - Royally! I mean I REALLY made a mess of things. Understand that I don't work with wood. I don't like working with wood and am no good at it. I s'pose if I practiced more my skills would improve but it becomes a vicious cycle: I don't like working with it, therefore I don't work with it, therefore when I do work with it my projects turn out terrible causing me to not want to work with it, etc, etc, .........  Like I said, a vicious cycle. 

Here's what happened. I bought pre-finished moulding so I wouldn't have to mess with stains or paints (the moulding is actually not wood, but a kind of plastic material). All I had to do was make eight simple 45degree miter cuts. That's it - four pieces of moulding, eight cuts. Simple.

10 pieces and 16 cuts later I ran out of moulding and said 'To hell with it!!@#^!*$'
(those weren't my exact words - I cleaned it up for the blog)

I took the best pieces, and hot glued them to them side of the base. They didn't match up right (DUH) but by then my frustration level - and blood pressure - were peaking!!! I attempted to fill the gaps with wood putty hoping to color the gaps to make the wood putty match. Well, it seems the wood putty wasn't all it was cracked up to be and dried kind of dry and flaky, and attempts to color it didn't work as the putty would just flake out! CRAP!

OK, I do have plan to fix this whole mess but it's gonna take time and there may not be updates for a while as I'm now working other projects (I had thought this project would have been done by now). I'll keep ya posted!

As always - Enjoy! (my misery) :-)




Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 7

The "Pfalz bei Kaub" diorama is slowly but surely taking shape. This week a significant step forward was taken with painting and landscaping. See details below. Enjoy!

The outline of the castle was drawn onto the painted Styrofoam and then masked off. This way, after all the scenery materials have been applied, the castle will have a flat surface to rest on.

Using a very light tan latex house paint, a 'halo' was painted around the perimeter. For this step it's best to use a dry-brush technique - dip the brush lightly into the paint and rub most of the paint off on a scrap piece of paper/cardboard. The hoped for effect is that when the gloss medium is applied to simulate water this 'halo' will look like the submerged part of the rock - Cross your fingers!!!

The rock is then painted with a heavier coat, being careful not to cover everything - we want some of that darker hickory color to show through in the low spots.

The really messy part:
1. I let the first coat of tan dry, then using a brush with a heavy coat of paint, paint a small area (only the top of the rock not the sides)
2. While the paint is still wet and using a kitchen sifter I sifted on a fine, light gray ballast normally used for N scale model railroading. Do this on the portion that still has the heavy coat of paint on.
3. Next came a light sifting of 'Woodland Scenics' brand burnt grass. Don't completely cover the ballast
4. Add small clumps of 'Woodland Scenics' coarse turf
5. Taking a straw I carefully blew away loose scenery material from around the edges of the paint and off of the diorama base
6. Lightly spray the scenery area with a mixture of water and liquid dishwasher detergent. Normally this is a step most modelers will do after the next step. I find that by spraying the area with this mixture first allows the glue/water mix to spread out better
7. I next soak the area just sprayed using a 50/50 mix of white glue and water, laced with about 3 tablespoons of liquid dish washing detergent.
(the liquid soap makes the water 'wetter' - in other words it decreases the surface tension of the water, allowing it to hunker down and get into every nook and cranny - that's how your dishes get cleaned! I use more per mixture than what is normally recommended, usually just a few drops, because it seems to works better for me)
8. Wipe off any water/glue mixture that may accumulate or run down the sides of the embankments.
9. Paint the next patch and repeat the scenery making.

Allow at least a couple of hours before pulling the masking tape off the castle footprint.Wait at least 12 hours for everything else to dry and set up. Generally speaking it's usually a whole day before I can get to the next phase which is plenty of drying time. Scrape off any little flecks/scenery bits and pieces and paint the blue of the water. After looking at several aerial shots of the castle, it turns out this shade of blue will work quite well. I'm okay with the diorama so far. Just a few more steps and we'll be finished!

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 6

It's nice to report that there's been some progress on the  Schreiber-Bogen "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" diorama this week. Perhaps not a great deal but progress is progress after all. I'll detail the particulars below.Enjoy!

Taking a rather large box cutter with the blade extended, the Styrofoam was slowly whittled down to a  contour I was satisfied with. I use this material for many of my projects and am used to it but oh brother is it messy! However, I've formed a workable routine: carve, pick up loose chunks & toss in garbage, vacuum. Repeat: carve, toss, vacuum


Next, the foam gets a cover of ready mixed, light-weight, patching plaster. It doesn't really hold detail well and would generally not be suitable for exacting scale work. It has a decent working time - about 15 minutes, and because it doesn't dry rock-hard like plaster, one can just poke in trees, shrubs, poles, whatever. Wait until it sets-up enough before painting - about 30-45 minutes. 


Now everything gets a coat of paint. This will be the base color upon which lighter colors will be layered. Normally I use a dark brown, but felt that this hickory shade will be just fine for what I want to do. With Styrofoam it's important that one uses latex paint - NOT oil , lacquer, or spray paints. They will eat away the Styrofoam like acid. Oh, and by the way - do protect your work surface. This is not a mess you can vacuum!!

 The dioramas featured here on Toys & Stuff are simple by choice. I'm no Master Modeler and know that I'll never make it into the Modelers Hall of Fame. But I'm willing to bet most of you readers are in the same boat I am. Just average modelers who want to work on their hobbies without over critical reviews. In other words, we're in it to have fun!

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 5

Progress on the "Pfalz bei Kaub" diorama has been slow going - mostly because I've been too pooped after work to mess with it! However, that being said, I did manage to get something done this week. I found a piece of MDF (medium density fiberboard) shelving laying about - I should have tossed it out a long time ago, now I'm glad I didn't - and it was pretty much right for what I wanted to accomplish.

This castle actually sits in the middle of a river on a rock. Some photos on the Web show the river exposing the rock and some show the rock nearly covered. I figured there were two basic ways to approach this diorama:
1.  Make a small base with just a hint of the rock showing and suggesting the water lapping up to the castle sides.
2. Model the exposed rock - along with the trees which had been planted on one end. This of course would require a larger diorama base.

The shelf piece I had found measures 11.25" (28.6cm) W x 28" (71.1cm) L and after looking at it, it appeared to be nicely suited for the larger diorama showing the exposed rock. Had it been shorter I probably would have cut it down even more and just gone with option 1.

  I printed photos of the castle  culled from the Web and used those to draw a rough outline of the rock on brown craft paper. It won't be exact, but I think it'll look OK when finished.


The pattern drawn on the paper was cut out and used as a template to cut pieces of .5" (1.3cm) thick Styrofoam. The Styrofoam was then glued to the shelf piece.


Hopefully we'll be able to get a little terraforming accomplished by next week. Until then - Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 4

Well folks, the past several weeks has been interesting. I didn't know what I was about to get into when starting this project but it's finally finished. It's the most difficult paper model I've ever attempted, never having done more than simple four-walls-and-a-roof buildings. The project to-date has taken approx. 18 hours and the past few hours have really been a bear! The very last parts to assemble were 22 small dormers located around the perimeter of the structure and these were quite tricky for me as they were pretty small and required a little more agility than I have left at my age. To make matters worse I inadvertently sliced through a couple of what were supposed to be fold lines! Oh crud. Still, after a little repair work, everything finally went together and here are the photos of the finished castle. It measures 8 1/4" (20.3cm) L x 3 1/8" (7.9cm) W x 5 3/4" (14.6cm) H. Stay tuned because the next step is trying to put together a small diorama to display the model on. Enjoy!









Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 3

The "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" castle is nearly finished. This past week I worked on the central tower. It went almost without a hitch EXCEPT for the very top roof section. It's a little piece with eight sides that, when glued together, is supposed to have a somewhat rounded shape. That little booger gave me fits!!! It was probably a combination of unsteady fingers, poor eyesight, old age, the stars weren't aligned right - something. Prior to gluing, each of the sections were rounded/bent by rolling them over a small round object (I used my wife's crochet hook). That SHOULD have made it easier to glue-up but it was simply difficult for me holding two roof sections together in an arc waiting for the glue to set up so that I could get on to the next section. Tweezers helped somewhat but they're made for straight objects and didn't work very well on the small curved forms. Anyway, it finally went together and here's a couple of photos to show this week's progress. Enjoy!





Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub" Pt 2

I didn't spend a whole lot of time this week on the model, but did manage to get the roofs and towers around the wall perimeter finished. This was a fairly straight forward task. It starts by gluing in place a small tower, followed by a long roof, then another tower and so on. Total time now spent on the model: about 14+ hours. Here's a couple of progress photos and some tips. Enjoy!




Getting the roofs to hunker down into a good fit is covered below.




 I used a black felt-tip marker cover the exposed edges of all the roof sections as well as some other areas around the structure.



Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Building A Memory - Schreiber-Bogen's "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub"

We're going to start a new series today. For a few weeks it may run on Tuesday or Wednesday but will probably migrate over to Thursday's in time. This series is called "Building A Memory". I was fortunate enough to have been stationed in Germany nearly ten years. I met my wife there (she's German) and my kids were born there. I used to tell my wife, "Stick with me and I'll show you Germany!" It's a funny thing, but residents of popular areas or countries often times don't either appreciate what they have in their own 'backyard' or are simply too wrapped up with other things to care. There is sooooo many things to do and see in Germany and yet most of the German's I knew, never really got out and played tourist - at least to the extent we did.

OK, that being said, we ended up going to visit a fair amount of castles and landmarks. And, to our great good fortune, the German firm of Schreiber-Bogen, producer of fine paper models, has a whole series of landmarks which, fortunately, I've visited. Today's project is "Pfalz im Rhein bei Kaub". Translated that means, Castle Pfalz, in the Rhine River, by the town of Kaub. Known as Burg Pfalzgrafenstein, it was built around 1326 specifically to collect tolls from the merchant shipping along the Rhine river and sits on a rock in the middle of the river. It was never a residence like many other castles and was really quite small.

Memories: It seems I don't have many photos of this visit and it could be that it was a spur-of-the-moment decision to visit it and I may not have brought my camera, but for us it has one of the funniest memories we have of our castle-hopping in Good Old Deutschland. I took the Frau and kids of course, but on this particular trip we also had my mother-in-law Ria. She was not the typical mother-in-law that comics and sitcoms make so much fun of but rather a great woman who accepted me in the family with open arms and was always welcoming. If you notice in many castle photos, you'll see these real small rooms protruding from the walls. These are, quite frankly, loos, toilets, potties. Remember, castles were built long before indoor plumbing and trying to run from a top floor to some out house in the back lot would have been impractical, sooooo, they built these little rooms that stuck out from the castle walls, and one would simply go in there to do their 'business'! Good Lord, just don't walk underneath at the wrong moment!!

To continue. Me, my wife, kids, and mother-in-law were visiting the castle - which by the way is pretty small and quite plain inside - when my mother-in-law simply HAD to heed the call of nature. It was 1987 and she had been gaining in years by then. Understand , there were no convenient restrooms and she had to go, soooo she simply lagged a little behind the group, used 'the little room', and caught up with us later. Now, we will always remember Pfalz bei Kaub as the castle "Wo Oma in die Rhein gepinkelt hatte.' (where Grandma tinkled in the Rhine) ! LOL.

Here are the only photos I could find (I'm still lookin' though).. There is a car ferry in the area and these pictures were taken from the ferry, but not on the same day we visited the castle.



The Model
A couple of things before we begin. A couple of weeks ago I blogged a quick and dirty beginners tutorial on paper modeling and listed some of the tools I use.  Howard Lamey of 'Little Glitter Houses' has added a few of his favorites for building with paper:



"1. 4" x 4" quilting square ruler...has1/8" grid plus a 45 and a 30/60 printed on it...
2. reverse clothes pin clamp...leftover from my musical instrument making hobby days...
the clear plastic ruler and the small carpenter's square are obvious...they're just 2 of my favorites...i also use a small 6" steel ruler "

Here's a couple of items not shown in the previous post:

1. A place to glob your glue. You DO NOT want to squirt glue directly on the kitchen table. Scrap cardboard works wonders.

2. A cuticle scissors. The scissors shown in the photo are sold by Fiskars for scrap booking, but they're nothing more than small curved cuticle scissors. They work wonders getting in to tight places and for cutting small curves.

3. 6" steel ruler - just like Howard says. Theses are simply less klutzier than large rulers."




The model consists of a cover sheet and 4 sheets with parts printed on them. The level of difficulty, as described by Schreiber-Bogen, is 'Difficult'


Tips

1. Some websites recommend scoring fold lines very lightly using a hobby knife, while others simply recommend using a 'spent' (no ink) ball point pen and simply drawing it over the fold line. In any case, the result is to break the fibers of the paper just at the surface, allowing for an easier bend.

2. There are two basic folds:
   - 'Hill' folds. These are the most common wherein the paper is folded over, like most tabs you will encounter
   - 'Valley' folds: Where the paper is folded up unto itself as in the photo below


'Valley' folds are normally demarcated using an 'X' on either side of the intended fold line. One pushes a stick pin into the middle of the 'X' as shown (I use foam core underneath my work for these).

Next, turn the sheet over and, using the pin holes as a guide, score the line.

There are no written instructions. The model is built using the exploded drawing as a reference and assembling each part in numerical sequence. TAKE YOUR TIME. If you're getting antsy, force yourself to slow down.


 It's best to glue the side to one another before trying to wrap them around the base


Separate each part from the surround as you need it. Don't rush.
There are three basic forms in paper models: the box, the tube, and the cone. This model uses all three and it's just a matter of assembling the box (or cone or tube) and attaching it to the castle base.

After 10 hours of work

More to come. Enjoy!