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Wooden Military Aircraft Models
Aug 28th, 2010 by admin

Wooden Military Aircraft Models


C-130 Hercules Transport Aircraft Wood Model


C-130 Hercules Transport Aircraft Wood Model



The craftsmanship is incredible, these are not mass produced with computers and laser cuts. These highly detailed models are cut by hand, assembled and finished. Different woods are used on the models, pieces are not stained. You see the natural color and grain of the wood. Each model has a heavy feel that compliments the beauty of the work. The model has three coats of polyurethane applied to the…


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit, F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit, F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)


$3.99


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit – F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)…

Wooden Military Aircraft Models

Wooden Military Aircraft Models Questions

Wooden Military Aircraft Models Videos

detailer:www.replicasmodelaircraft.com

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Military Aircraft Models Wooden
Aug 8th, 2010 by admin

Military Aircraft Models Wooden


C-130 Hercules Transport Aircraft Wood Model


C-130 Hercules Transport Aircraft Wood Model



The craftsmanship is incredible, these are not mass produced with computers and laser cuts. These highly detailed models are cut by hand, assembled and finished. Different woods are used on the models, pieces are not stained. You see the natural color and grain of the wood. Each model has a heavy feel that compliments the beauty of the work. The model has three coats of polyurethane applied to the…


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit, F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit, F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)


$3.99


Woodcraft Wooden 3D Model Kit – F-15 Fighter Plane (1 Each)…

Military Aircraft Models Wooden

Kilt

The kilt is a knee-length skirt with pleats at the rear, originating in the traditional dress of men and boys in the Scottish Highlands of the 16th century. Since the 19th century it has been associated with the wider culture of Scotland in general, or with Celtic (and more specifically Gaelic) heritage elsewhere. It is most often made of woollen cloth in a tartan pattern.
Hooded Cloak
Though the Scottish kilt is most often worn mainly on formal occasions or at Highland Games and sports events, it has also been adapted as an item of fashionable informal male clothing in recent years. The Scottish kilt displays uniqueness of design, construction, and convention which differentiate it from other garments fitting the general description. It is a tailored garment that is wrapped around the wearer’s body at the natural waist (between the lowest rib and the hip) starting from one side (usually the wearer’s left), around the front and back and across the front again to the opposite side. The fastenings consist of straps and buckles on both ends, the strap on the inside end usually passing through a slit in the waistband to be buckled on the outside; alternatively it may remain inside the waistband and be buckled inside. The kilt covers the body from the waist down to just above the knees. The overlapping layers in front are called “aprons” and are flat; the single layer of fabric around the sides and back is pleated. A kilt pin is fastened to the front apron on the free corner (but is not passed through the layer below). Underwear may or may not be worn, as the wearer prefers: in some circumstances underwear is prohibited by military regulations, but is generally required, or at least recommended, for activities such as dancing. Organizations that sanction and grade the competitions in Highland dancing and bagpiping all have rules governing acceptable attire for the competitors. These rules specify that the kilt is to be worn (except that in the national dances, the female competitors will be wearing the Aboyne dress) The history of the kilt stretches back to at least late 16th century Scotland. However, the nationalism of that tradition is relatively recent. It was only with the Romantic Revival of the early 19th century that the highland kilt was adopted by Lowlanders and the Scottish Diaspora as a symbol of national identity. People from other countries with Celtic connections, some Irish, Cornish, Welsh and Manx, have also adopted tartan kilts in recent times, although to a lesser degree. The kilt first appeared as the great kilt, a full length garment whose upper half could be worn as a cloak draped over the shoulder, or brought up over head as a cloak. The small kilt or walking kilt (similar to the ‘modern’ kilt) did not develop until the late 17th or early 18th century, and is essentially the bottom half of the great kilt. The typical kilt as seen at modern Highland games events is made of twill woven worsted wool. The twill weave used for kilts is a 2-2 type, meaning that each weft thread passes over and under two warp threads at a time. The result is a distinctive diagonal weave pattern in the fabric which is called the twill line. This kind of twill, when woven according to a given color pattern, or sett (see below), is called tartan. In contrast, the Irish kilt traditionally was made from solid color cloth, with saffron or green being the most widely used colours. [1] Kilting fabric weights are given in ounces per yard and run from the very heavy regimental worsted of approximately 18??2 oz. down to a light worsted of about 10??1 oz. The most common weights for kilts are 13 oz. and 16 oz. The heavier weights are more appropriate for cooler weather, while the lighter weights would tend to be selected for warmer weather or for active use, such as Highland dancing. Some patterns are available in only a few weights. A modern kilt for a typical adult uses about 6?? yards of single-width (about 26??0 inches) or about 3?? yards of double-width (about 54??0 inches) tartan fabric. Double width fabric is woven so that the pattern exactly matches on the selvage. The kilt is usually made without a hem because a hem would make the garment too bulky and cause it to hang incorrectly. The exact amount of fabric needed depends upon several factors including the size of the sett, the number of pleats put into the garment, and the size of the person. For a full kilt, 8 yards of fabric would be used regardless of size and the number of pleats and depth of pleat would be adjusted according to their size. For a very large waist, it may be necessary to use 9 yards of cloth. One of the most distinctive features of the authentic Scots kilt is the tartan pattern, or sett, it exhibits. The association of particular patterns with individual clans and families can be traced back perhaps one or two centuries. It was only in the Victorian era (19th century) that the system of named tartans we know today began to be systematically recorded and formalized, mostly by weaving companies for mercantile purposes. Up until this point, highland tartans held regional associations rather than being identified with any particular clan. Today there are also tartans for districts, counties, societies and corporations. There are also setts for States and Provinces, schools and universities, sporting activities, individuals, and commemorative and simple generic patterns that anybody can wear. See History of the kilt for the process by which these associations came about. Setts are always arranged horizontally and vertically, never diagonally (except when adapted for ladies’ skirts). They are specified by their thread counts, the sequence of colors and their units of width. As an example, the Wallace tartan has a thread count given as “K/4 R32 K32 Y/4″ (K is black, R is red, and Y is yellow). This means that 4 units of black thread will be succeeded by 32 units of red, etc., in both the warp and the weft. Typically, the units are the actual number of threads, but as long as the proportions are maintained, the resulting pattern will be the same. This thread count also includes a pivot point indicated by the slash between the colour and thread number. The weaver is supposed to reverse the weaving sequence at the pivot point to create a mirror image of the pattern. This is called a symmetrical tartan. Some tartans, like Buchanan, are asymmetrical, which means they do not have a pivot point. The weaver weaves the sequence all the way through and then starts at the beginning again for the next sett. Setts are further characterized by their size, the number of inches (or centimetres) in one full repeat. The size of a given sett depends not only on the number of threads in the repeat, but also on the weight of the fabric. This is so because the heavier the fabric the thicker the threads will be, and thus the same number of threads of a heavier weight fabric will occupy more space. The colours given in the thread count are specified as in heraldry, although tartan patterns are not heraldic. The exact shade which is used is a matter of artistic freedom and will vary from one fabric mill to another as well as in dye lot to another within the same mill. Tartans are commercially woven in four standard colour variations that describe the overall tone. “Ancient” or “Old” colours may be characterized by a slightly faded look intended to resemble the vegetable dyes that were once used, although in some cases “Old” simply identifies a tartan that was in use before the current one. Ancient greens and blues are lighter while reds appear orange. “Modern” colours are bright and show off modern aniline dyeing methods. The colours are bright red, dark hunter green, and usually navy blue. “Weathered” or “Reproduction” colours simulate the look of older cloth weathered by the elements. Greens turn to light brown, blues become gray, and reds are a deeper wine colour. The last colour variation is “Muted” which tends toward earth tones. The greens are olive, blues are slate blue, and red is an even deeper wine colour. This means that of the approximately 7,000 registered tartans available there are four possible colour variations for each, resulting in nearly 30,000 tartans. Setts are registered with the Scottish Tartans Authority which maintains a collection of fabric samples characterized by name and thread count. In all, there are approximately 5000 registered tartans.[citation needed] Although many tartans are added every year, most of the registered patterns available today were created in the 19th century by commercial weavers who had a large variety of colours to work with. The rise of Highland romanticism and the growing Anglicization of Scottish culture by the Victorians at the time led to registering tartans with clan names. Before that, most of these patterns were more connected to geographical regions than to any clan. There is therefore nothing symbolic about the colours, and nothing about the patterns is a reflection of the status of the wearer. Although low quality kilts can be obtained in standard sizes, a quality kilt is tailored to the individual proportions of the wearer. At least three measurements, the waist, hips, and length of the kilt, are usually required. Sometimes the rise (distance above the waist) or the fall (distance from waistline to the widest part of the hips) is also required. A properly made kilt, when buckled on the tightest holes of the straps, should not be so loose that the wearer can easily twist the kilt around the body, nor should it be so tight that it causes “scalloping” of the fabric where it is buckled. Additionally, the length of the kilt when buckled at the waist should reach a point no lower than halfway across the kneecap nor higher than about an inch above it. A kilt can be pleated with either box or knife pleats. A knife pleat is a simple fold, while the box pleat is bulkier, consisting of two knife pleats back-to-back. Knife pleats are the most common in modern civilian kilts. Regimental traditions vary. The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders use box pleats, while the Black Watch make their kilts of the same tartan with knife pleats. These traditions were also passed on to affiliated regiments in the Commonwealth, and were retained in successor battalions to these regiments in the amalgamated Royal Regiment of Scotland. Pleats can be arranged relative to the pattern in two ways. In pleating to the stripe, a vertical stripe is selected and the fabric is folded so that this stripe runs down the center of each pleat. The result is that along the back and sides of the kilt horizontal bands appear which look different from the front than from the back. This is often called military pleating because it is the style adopted by many military regiments. It is also widely used by pipe bands. In pleating to the sett the fabric is folded so that the pattern of the sett is repeated all around the kilt (especially in the waistband). This is done by taking up one full sett in each pleat, or two full setts if they are small. This causes the kilt to look much the same from both front and back. Any pleat is characterized by depth and width. The portion of the pleat that protrudes under the overlying pleat is the size or width. The pleat width is selected based on the size of the sett and the amount of fabric to be used in constructing the kilt, and will generally vary from about 1/2″ to about 3/4″. The depth is the part of the pleat which is folded under the overlying pleat. It depends solely on the size of the tartan sett even when pleating to the stripe, since the sett determines the spacing of the stripes. The number of pleats used in making the kilt depends upon how much material is to be used in constructing the garment and upon the size of the sett. The pleats across the fell are tapered slightly since the wearer’s waist will be narrower than his hips and the pleats are usually stitched down either by machine or by hand. As the kilt is made of wool, it should not simply be cleaned in a washing machine along with other laundry. Although the cloth is pre-shrunk, a washing machine would spoil the pleats and the kilt would need to be pressed. Instead, there are two main methods by which a kilt can be laundered: dry cleaning and hand laundering in cold or lukewarm water. Expert recommendations differ on the better of these two methods. Tewksbury and Stuehmeyer, in The Art of Kiltmaking, advise strongly against having the garment dry cleaned, stating that “dry cleaning leaves a subtle residue on the kilt” and, as a result, it “will soil more easily after it has been dry-cleaned”, but Matthew Newsome, Curator of the Scottish Tartans Museum in North Carolina (USA), states that “it is best to dry clean” the kilt, feeling that the kilt does not come into direct contact with the skin for very long and thus will not readily soil. In between wearings, the kilt should first be aired out and then hung in a closet. One way to hang the kilt is to use a skirt hanger with large clasps. The kilt is first folded twice in half along the waist line. Then the skirt hanger is used to clasp the top of the kilt before it is hung in the closet. If moths are a problem, it can be hung with a cedar cache or strips of cedar wood. Occasionally, the pleats may need to be re-pressed and this requires care. The authors of The Art of Kiltmaking advise that the pleats should be basted down before pressing so as to keep the pleats as straight as possible from the bottom of the fell to the bottom of the kilt, thus preserving the look of the sett when the kilt is worn. Today most Scotsmen regard the kilt as formal dress or ceremonial national dress. Although there are still a few people who wear the kilt daily, it is generally owned or hired to be worn at weddings or other formal occasions, much the same way as top hat and tails are in England or tuxedos in America, and may be worn by anyone regardless of nationality or descent. For formal wear, the kilt is usually worn with a Prince Charlie or an Argyll jacket. (Commercial suppliers have now produced equivalent jackets with Irish and Welsh themed styling.) The kilt is also used for parades by groups such as the Scouts, and in many places the kilt is seen in force at Highland games and pipe band championships as well as being worn at Scottish country dances and ceilidhs. Certain regiments/units of the British Army and armies of other Commonwealth nations (including Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa) still continue to wear the kilt as part of dress or duty uniform, though they have not been used in combat since 1940. Uniforms in which the kilt is worn include Ceremonial Dress, Service Dress, and Barracks Dress. The kilt is considered appropriate for ceremonial parades, office duties, less formal parades, walking out, mess dinners, and classroom instruction/band practice. Ceremonial kilts have also been developed for the U.S. Marine Corps, and the pipe and drum bands of the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Air Force. In recent years, the kilt has also become increasingly common in Scotland and around the world for casual wear, for example with the Jacobite shirt. It is not uncommon to see the kilt worn at Irish pubs in the US, and it is becoming somewhat less rare to see them in the workplace.[4] Casual use of the kilt dressed down with lace-up boots or moccasins, and with tee shirts or golf shirts, is becoming increasingly more familiar at Highland Games. The kilt is associated with a sense of Scottish national pride and will often be seen being worn, along with a football top, when members of the Tartan Army are watching a football or rugby match. The small ornamental Sgian Dubh dagger is often omitted where security concerns are paramount (for example, they are not allowed on commercial aircraft). For the same reasons, the traditional Sgian Dubh is sometimes substituted by a wooden or plastic alternative, as its use is now largely ornamental (with only the hilt showing over the top of the hose). Though the origins of the Irish kilt continue to be a subject of debate, current evidence suggests that the kilt itself originated in the Scottish Highlands and Isles and was adopted by Irish nationalists at the turn of the 20th century as a symbol of Celtic identity. [5] A garment that has often been mistaken for the kilt in early depictions is the Irish ‘Lein-croich’, a long tunic traditionally made from solid colour cloth, with black, saffron and green being the most widely used colours. Solid colored Irish kilts were first adopted for use by the Irish Regiments serving in the British Army, but they could often be seen in late 19th and early 20th century photos in Ireland especially at political and musical gatherings, as the kilt was adopted as a symbol of Gaelic nationalism in Ireland during this period. [6] Tweed kilts were also not uncommon in both Scotland and Ireland and have been popular with sportsmen, fishermen, and hunters. Many “Irish County” tartans were designed by Polly Wittering, first produced in 1996 by the House of Edgar, of Perth in Scotland. Marton Mills in West Yorkshire produced a competing “Irish County Crest Collection” based on the colours from Irish county crests, resulting in tartans that are considered aesthetically questionable by many traditionalists. There are also a number of “Irish District” tartans most of which are recent designs by Lochcarron of Scotland. The Ulster tartan is one of the oldest registered Irish tartans. It was found by a farmer, W.G. Dixon, in County Londonderry in 1956 as he uncovered pieces of clothing made from the design. The Belfast Museum and Art Gallery dated the material from between the 1590s to 1650s. Its exact origins are unknown, but it is likely that came from a Scottish pioneer during the beginning of the Ulster plantation period when the Scots first came in great numbers to Ulster. There are other generic Irish tartans including the Irish National, St. Patrick’s, Tara, and Clodagh. Some Irish family tartans have been appearing over the years, although these are few at the moment more are being created. O’Brien, Sullivan, Murphy, Fitzpatrick, and Forde are fairly common examples of Irish family tartans. In present day Ireland the kilt is still seen very much as being primarily Scottish, and the current crop of county and district tartans is largely unknown in Ireland and indeed difficult to obtain, having been designed and marketed primarily for the Irish-American market. As they have been neither designed nor manufactured in Ireland itself it is questionable whether they can be strictly described as Irish. In the book District Tartans by Gordon Teall of Teallach and Philip D Smith Jr (ISBN 0 85683 085 2) only three tartans are identified as being distinctly Irish; these are Ulster, Tara, and Clodagh. As noted above the Ulster tartan originates from around 1590-1650 and is probably Scottish in origin.[7] The Tara was first noted around 1880 and was originally called Murphy. The Clodagh has an earliest date of 1971 with uncertainty as to its original designer or first appearance. Day-to-day kilt wearing is rarely if ever encountered. Within the world of Irish dancing the boy’s kilt has been largely abandoned, especially since the worldwide popularity of Riverdance and the revival and interest in Irish dancing generally. There are exceptions to these trends in Ireland. A vibrant piping scene in Ireland means that there are many kilted bands throughout the whole of Ireland, particularly in the north of the island[citation needed]. The majority of these bands wear tartan kilts, the solid colour saffron kilt being almost exclusively the preserve of the pipe bands of the Republic’s Defence Forces and the British Army’s Irish regiments. Although not a traditional component of national dress outside Scotland, the kilt has become recently popular in the other Celtic nations as a sign of Celtic identity.[8] Kilts and tartans can therefore also be seen in Wales, Cornwall, the Isle of Man, Brittany, the Tras-os-Montes region in the North of Portugal, and Galicia in Spain, as well as parts of England, particularly the North East. Nowadays with Welsh nationalism on the rise and a resurgence of Welsh national pride, the kilt (Welsh: Cilt)[citation needed]. Although they are generally seen these days in formal settings like weddings, there has been an increase in the number of people wearing their kilt to a rugby or football match, paired with a jersey rather than a formal jacket[citation needed]. The St David’s Tartan or brithwe Dewi Sant is one of the most popular tartans in Wales, but individual family tartans are being produced, despite there being no evidence that the Welsh (or any other Celtic nation for that matter) traditionally used tartan to identify families. Williams, Jones, Thomas, Evans, and Davies are among the most popular tartans and common names in Wales. The Welsh National tartan was designed by D.M. Richards in 1967 to demonstrate Wales’ connection with the greater Celtic world. Its colours (green, red, and white) are the colours of the Welsh national flag. There are currently 12 Breton tartans of which Brittany National (National Breton), Brittany Walking, Lead it Of and 9 tartans for the traditional countries which compose Brittany: Kerne, Leon, Tregor, Gwened, Dol, St Malo, Rennes, Nantes, St Brieuc. All Breton tartans are officially recorded in Scotland. Contemporary kilts (also known as modern kilts) have appeared in the clothing marketplace in Scotland [10], the USA and Canada in a range of fabrics, including leather, denim, corduroy, and cotton. [11] They may be designed for formal or casual dress, for use in sports or outdoor recreation, or as white or blue collar workwear. Some are closely modelled on traditional Scottish kilts, but others are similar only in being knee-length skirts for men. They may have box pleats, symmetrical knife pleats, or no pleats at all, and be fastened by studs or velcro instead of buckles. Many are designed to be worn without a sporran, and may have pockets or tool belts attached. Kilts are sometimes referred to by enthusiasts for their daily use as Male Un-bifurcated Garments or “Mugs”, though strictly this term also covers other garments such as sarongs which are regarded as viable alternatives to trousers (bifurcated garments). In 2008, a USPS letter carrier, Dean Peterson, made formal proposal that the kilt, as a Male Unbifurcated Garment, be approved as an acceptable postal uniform for reasons of comfort. The proposal was defeated at the convention of the 220,000-member National Letter Carriers’ Association.
About the Author

I am a professional editor from himfr,which is a top B2B search engine .

Military Aircraft Models Wooden Questions

Military Aircraft Models Wooden Videos

1944 Messerschmitt Me 323

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Airplane Models Revell
Jul 20th, 2010 by admin

Airplane Models Revell


1/144 Airbus A 321 50 Jahre L


1/144 Airbus A 321 50 Jahre L



1/144 Airbus A 321 “”50 Jahre L”"…


Revell Star Wars -Millennium Falcon


Revell Star Wars -Millennium Falcon


$36.95


Illustrated assembly instructions Total pieces: 52 Length: 14-3/4″. Skill level 1….

Revell B17G Flying Fortress  1:48 Scale


Revell B17G Flying Fortress 1:48 Scale


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1:48 scale. Powered by four 1200 hp Wright engines, this was the toughest, strongest and most reliable bomber of the U.S Army air corps in WWII. This kit features detailed cockpit and compartments for Bombardier, navigator, radio operator and gunners are fully detailed with seats, controls and instrument panels, gun turrets rotate and the propellers spin. The length is 19 3/16 with a wing span of …

Revell Corsair F4U-4 1:48 Scale


Revell Corsair F4U-4 1:48 Scale


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1-48 Scale. Wingspan measures 10 1/2 inches long. Molded in light gray with waterslide decals, features folding wings, retracting landing gear and doors, optional armament 3 external drop tanks, 2 -1000 pound bombs and 8 underwing rockets. Decals for VMF-214 Black Sheep squardron USS Sicily 1951 and VMA-332 USS Bairoko 1953. Skill level 2….

Airplane Models Revell

Top Personal Protection Gifts This Holiday Season

It goes without saying that you want your loved ones to be safe, when they’re at home and especially when they’re away. With the current economy and the upcoming holiday season, it’s more important than ever to take precautions against theft and other forms of attack.

Presented below are personal protection gifts that give anyone an added security and advantage for responding when events take a turn for the worse. Personal protection gifts  make great gifts, affordably priced and easily gift-wrapped. But the peace of mind they’ll give you – and them – is a priceless gift that they’ll appreciate for years to come.

Pepper Spray and Capsicum – Personal protection items are an urban necessity for women and men alike, especially when moving out and about during the busy holiday shopping rushes. Pepper spray, a powerful deterrent against personal attack, is available in canisters that affix neatly to key chains and cell phone clips. Pepper spray is even available concealed in a LipStick case.

Pepper spray works by rapidly disbursing a stream of very concentrated chili pepper into an adversary’s eyes. The result is very painful and can take a great effort to soothe, but it’s ultimately not permanently damaging. Pepper spray is sometimes sold under the names OC spray, capsicum spray, or OC gas. A very effective protection device to ward off violent attack.

Stun Guns and Tasers – Stun guns and tasers are technology that are available to consumers today. Using powerful jolts of electricity to disable an opponent, these non-lethal but completely effective personal protection tools are affordably priced at many online personal protection outfitters. Always make sure your buying from an authorized taser dealer.

Like pepper spray, tasers and stun guns should be used properly and handled with extreme care. They are not toys, and should not be used by children.

Tactical Batons – A favorite of law enforcement personnel for years because they offer a more aggressive form of counter-attack, tactical batons are compact in storage but provide an effective deterrent against belligerent behavior. They’re available in several styles and models, including the most famous telescoping model. Their stainless steel construction makes them durable enough to last for years and survive the most challenging incident.

Personal Alarms – Providing a more non-violent response to personal attacks – while also offering a powerful deterrent – personal alarms are compact sirens, whistles and klaxons that deliver an attention-getting noise at a moment’s notice. Personal alarms are allowed in airplanes, schools and government buildings.

Many alarms are small enough to fit on keychains, and some include flashlights and carabineer clips for additional utility. They are battery powered but highly energy efficient. Many are affordably priced.

Diversion Safes – The hottest trend in home security, diversion safes are small safe-boxes cleverly camouflaged as ordinary household items. Some resemble typically mundane garage items such as cans of motor oil or engine fluid; some are built to perfectly resemble garden stones. For the inside of the house, some models take the shape of hardcover bound books.

Diversion safes offer a unique gift-giving opportunity as well. Rather than gift-wrapping, they can be placed in a house or yard according to their function. The gift giver can then invite the recipient to guess where the gift is. The revelation of its actual purpose will provide instantaneous surprise and also instruction on its use.

About the Author

Alexis Moore writes for SecuritySaint.com where you can buy Self DefenseTasers , Stun Guns and pepper spray. Visit http://www.SecuritySaint.com to learn how to protect yourself and your loved ones.

Airplane Models Revell Questions


Instead of enamel, can I use acrylics for my model airplane?

Hi
I just got a Revell airplane model and was just wondering if I could use acrylics instead of enamel for colouring, and if so would I need to prime it first and details like that.
Thanks.

You can, but I’d only recommend it if you have an airbrush You’ll definately have to wash it first in warm water, dry it thoroughly, then prime it with a spray primer. Getting even coats of paint can be really tricky with acrylic paint on those large smooth surfaces. You’ll also want to coat it with a couple layers of clear finish when you’re done.

Flat acryllic paints are often used for millitary models precisely for the dull, faraway look they give. The smaller the scale of the replica, the lighter and duller the paint should be in relation to the original. It has something to do with ‘atmospheric perspective’.

Airplane Models Revell Videos

Aircraft models WW I (World War 1)

Unboxing three brand new Plane Models

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Plastic Aircraft Model Making
Jul 12th, 2010 by admin

Plastic Aircraft Model Making


How to Build Plastic Aircraft Models


How to Build Plastic Aircraft Models


$10.95


Plastic Aircraft Model Making

Frbiz.com Reports Pvc Plastic Flooring Industry Into The Period Of Hegemony

    Domestic and foreign well-known household brand experience museum building materials Building Materials Center grand opening of the Bohai Sea to the Mona Lisa, Faenza, Bode as represented by the South Seiko ceramic materials into the center of Tianjin Bohai Sea hinterland, severity of the massive, directly to thousands of square meters of the great shops and other major vendors.

Building an integrated home experience, the completion of the museum will be diversified, the overall home-oriented culture to a more intuitive display of all-round perspective, replacing the previous model of a single commodity marketing, and gradually with the idea of hundreds or even thousands of square meters of hall, Experience museum instead of the original dozens of square meters of the small booth, Tianjin market, turn off the wave of home building materials. This week, journalists will introduce you to a new type of home improvement materials – plastic floor, feel the “World Standard floor” to bring you a brand new home-improvement ideas.

    Han Guangren said booming domestic sheet flooring, especially the plastic flooring, export volume increased year by year, but they can utter the least sound was rare at the floor of the brand, while in stark contrast, in the best-selling domestic production of PVC flooring products or foreign brands play a key role. Hanguang Ren said the World standard decoration company is the first company to do the plastic floor is the only one.

In the south of the home decoration, use of plastic flooring has become a trend also reflects consumers seeking health, environmental protection, quality of life of the home-improvement aspirations. In the north, the plastic part of the family on the ground floor is also the new face of decorative materials, Han Guangren told reporters that the establishment of the museum experience, you can make more consumers aware of this new material is straightforward, but also the experience and feelings, which is a kinds of good ways to promote.

    Choose to experience the museum based on the “Bohai Sea,” even more eyes on this market in the Bohai Bay area of influence. When asked whether he is worried the tiles around the brand experience of several mature museum would “World standard” an impact when the Han Guangren confidently told reporters that although the new plastic flooring, but because of its good quality and high performance, cost-effective has been widely sought after in foreign markets. Once consumers have the opportunity to Tianjin to learn about the many advantages of this new material will definitely be re-recognized by consumers.

   

    Plastic flooring into the home-improvement market

    Integration of home building materials, as the Bohai Sea to experience the museum’s only a plastic flooring brand, the World Museum marked the emergence of flooring experience, has attracted many people’s eyes. It is not generally familiar to the family of composite flooring, solid wood flooring, but is widely used in hospitals, schools, cinemas, kindergartens and other public places of PVC plastic flooring. Has been used for tooling works on the floor, this year chose to establish home to experience the Bohai Sea Museum, Tianjin Shi Han Guangren, general manager of Standard Decorative Building Materials Co., Ltd., said it is hoped that through this form, so that more consumers aware of these new material.

    According to Han Guangren introduction, PVC plastic flooring can be made into imitation marble, imitation wood, imitation carpets and other materials, the effect can almost be taken as real and rich colors available to designers ample room for imagination. Sufficient wear resistance to ensure its long life, high strength so that it will not be damaged when subject to a certain load, good water resistance and anti-corrosive, it has been used in many places, soft and rich in elastic It is enough to feel comfort. More importantly, PVC plastic flooring excellent environmental protection can greatly reduce family decoration caused by air pollution. It is precisely because it is of these advantages, more and more of its products began to enter the family, particularly as a children’s room of choice.

    PVC industry will enter a “giant” hegemony Times

    With the increasing openness of China’s PVC market, particularly in foreign investment and joint ventures to join the market competition will be further intensified, PVC industry will face a re-shuffle. Intensifying the restructuring, to achieve intensive operations is PVC trend in the development of industrial production through large-scale integration, production and consumption in the flame for 30 years old, small, old or eliminated production enterprises , or by mergers and acquisitions. Hanguang Ren said that around 2010, through mergers and acquisitions and restructuring, PVC industry, there will be 1 million tons / year “aircraft carrier” class manufacturers come out, China’s PVC industry will enter a “giant” hegemony era.
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Plastic Aircraft Model Making Questions


Airbrush + compressor for plastic aircraft models?

Hi,
I want to buy an airbrush for better results with my models, so I was thinking which one of these three?

http://www.hobbylinc.com/htm/hca/hcahcar4012.htm

or

http://www.hobbylinc.com/htm/bad/bad200-1.htm

or
http://www.paascheairbrush.com/cgi-bin/store/search.cgi?category=Single+Action+Airbrushes (the 10th one from top to bottom)

+ this compressor http://www.canadiantire.ca/browse/product_detail.jsp?FOLDER%3C%3Efolder_id=2534374303523072&bmUID=1234702073509&PRODUCT%3C%3Eprd_id=845524443295410&assortment=primary&fromSearch=true
is it any good? will the hose fit any of those airbrushes?

I am a student, I don’t make a lot of money, so I don’t want to spend a lot on this. any advise on anything I didn’t mention would be good too, thanks.

Iwata air brushes are probably the best fallowed by pasche. I would go with the airbrush from them and than do a compressor that fits the airbrush. The choice of the airbrush depends on what kind of models and what kind of paint you will use. Double action air brushes are the best, they have the most versatility and ease of use. If you are looking for detail you have to choose the right tip that is not large and can be adjusted. The first airbrush looks the best and it would be my choice, your compressor link does not work.

Plastic Aircraft Model Making Videos

Modeling Tips: The Importance of Dihedral Angles

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Skymarks Airplane Models
Jun 28th, 2010 by admin

Skymarks Airplane Models


SkyMarks B777-200 Air France Model Airplane


SkyMarks B777-200 Air France Model Airplane


$30.75


Sky Marks is a highly detailed line of snap-fit predecorated plastic models. The models feature solid injection molded plastic construction with highly detailed graphics. All models assemble in minutes and include a display stand. 1:200 SCALE…

American Airlines Radio Control Airplane


American Airlines Radio Control Airplane



This is an officially authorized American Airlines Radio Controlled Turbo Sonic Jumbo Jet. This toy is really cool as it can be remote controled with the encluded battery powered radio transmitter and is a lot of fun for kids and adults alike. This plane does not fly but can be controlled to taxi and make appropriate sounds. The picture is of an Air Force One version, this plane is exactly the sam…


Skymarks Airbus A380-800 - Scale: 1/200


Skymarks Airbus A380-800 – Scale: 1/200


$41.00


Here it is!! The next generation of wide bodies……The Airbus A380-800 Double-Deck airliner! This incredible model represents the prototype of the largest airliner yet. This snap fit model is pre-decorated in Airbus House colors and includes landing gear and a stand. The registration number is F-WWOW. Measures approx. 11 in. long. Scale 1/200. Ages 6+…

SkyMarks Southwest B737-700W NBA Slam Model Airplane


SkyMarks Southwest B737-700W NBA Slam Model Airplane


$31.22


This is a 1:130 scale snap fit model airplane of the new Boeing 737-700W aircraft in the colors of Southwest Airlines. The colors are of the new special NBA Slam livery of Southwest….

Skymarks Airplane Models Questions

Skymarks Airplane Models Videos

Skymarks Boeing 747 – 400 klm model

Unboxing – Dragon-Models – 1:400 Qatar Airways 777-300ER

It has never been easier to shop for Skymarks Airplane Models, So run don”t walk and pick up Skymarks Airplane Models at bargain prices!

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