The painting process was pretty simple. Brown Modpodge as a base coat for strength. Medium brown basecoat, light brown highlight and an inkwash for the deck surface.
I was going to leave the shipped without rigging. I built it to use in my D&D game and rigging would interfere with game play. In the end I went for it and am pretty happy with the result. I am telling myself if I built anymore ships, they would take half as long and look twice as good because I learned so much going through the build process.
The rigging was completed with the aid of the following blog: https://volsminiatures.blogspot.com/2014/05/rory-mccreadies-step-by-step-guide-to_18.html?fbclid=IwAR2XXEa7glGqMBNlf03zCF7AaV_1-xljhlUtcBXx8VuuK3Mjc5pJMrTXNIk
This gentleman's blog helped me rig my 1/1200 74 gunner back in the day. I used this model to help with the mast design and also the rigging.
1/1200 Micronaut model
I took calipers to the 1/1200 model to get the ratio of the masts and yardarms relative to the hull. The masts are 1/2 inch dowelling and the yardarms are 1/4" dowelling. The fighting tops are Styrofoam with nails and string making up the rail. The ship rails are nails topped with balsa strips. I used finishing nails stuck into the Styrofoam to attach the rigging to. I decorated the masts with bands of electrical tape. I harden the string used for railing by soaking it in pva/water. I did this to a bunch of string which I planned to cut into strips to glue to the ratlines as crosshatching but ended up skipping that step.
Last step before rigging
The sails were made from paper towel soaked in pva glue/ water solution. I went for furled sails cuz it was easier. If I was going to do full sails, I would have made form out of Styrofoam and draped the wet paper towel over it to dry and harden in the appropriate shape. Maybe for my next ship.....
Beautiful work, it looks amazing
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Deletethat is a fine bit of kit, I admire your skills with the rigging.
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