Sunday, 3 May 2020

Viking Ship Gokstad

I thought the Airfix Golden Hind would have been my last ship build  but never say never.




The Build
The hull and decking fit together easily. I decided to go for the under sail version which meant covering all the oar holes. The covers are tiny and adding them was fiddly to say the least.
A couple of hours and many layers of paint.
The Sail.
After trimming the sides it (it´s one of those preformed plastic sails) was scored with fine sand paper to remove the shine and give a paintable surface. Fine thread glued on along the edge of the top and both sides. Several layers of paint. The 1st two in opposing directions and layed on with a course 1/2" brush to give some texture, then 3-4 dry brushes. Masking tape and the red stripes added.
Holes drilled and attached with thread to the spar.
The Rigging.
The Emhar instructions are a bit, er?, not that good. They suggest drilling holes in what are essentially, very thin ribbing to secure mast ropes, nothing on how to rope up the anchor and some other oddities that don´t strike me as being quite right.
After looking online I found two examples;
1. A Dusek kit HERE
2. Another wooden ship (make unknown) HERE
I used both as inspiration for the following rigging, except I´ll use plain slightly modern blocks instead of the odd looking "H" things shown on both the above linked builds.

As soon as I added the sail, it became very apparent I´d need three hands, one to hold the ship and another two to attach the rigging so...
...I made a stand out of some old polystyrene packing.
Most of the rigging completed.
Prefit of the rudderman. The Emhar Bods are hard plastic, so the arms can be altered into position and they stay put without warm water treatment
The Crew
Mostly Emhar and one Strelets bod. I know, there´s only 14 but I haven´t found enough decent poses that would be usefull for crew members but I´ll add some more as and when I find them.

10 comments:

  1. A very impressive looking build! Full marks on the rigging (and the improvised third hand!), that alone would have put me off.

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  2. Excellent work again Paul! I just miss the part how you made the base.

    Greetings
    Peter

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    1. Thanks Peter. The basing is the same (with a bit more blue added this time) as the Revell Cog
      http://paulsbods.blogspot.com/2019/03/hanse-kogge-revell.html
      Plaster of paris with some PVA added, two layers of toilet paper (very expensive stuff these days) acrylic paints and acrylic double gloss.

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  3. Fabulous work, I love all of your stuff but this is just lovely!

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  4. As impressive as the whole ship and the crew are, I am most impressed with the sail. The colour and the texture is just perfect- you really nailed it.

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  5. That slick looking craft looks very fast. High Winds and a great rough sea. Splendid indeed. Finding figures is kind of hard for these type of boats. All the Best. BB

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  6. That's one of the most impressive ships I ever saw in this scale. Great work!

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  7. belatedly Paul this is fantastic - I had always felt the simple longships lacked the interest of later ships or triremes for that matter. thank you for sharing

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  8. That is tidy Paul, very impressed.

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