Thursday 22 October 2020

WWII Royal Navy Ships

To give myself a break from the ongoing Republican Roman project I thought I'd give a few GHQ 1/2400 WWII ships a go, starting with a dozen Royal Navy vessels. I was inspired by a video tutorial posted by Ken at Yarkshire Gamer (http://yarkshiregamer.blogspot.com/) where he demonstrated a technique which involved first attaching the ship to a base, and then building up the base around the model before starting to paint the ship itself.

This approach resonated with me, as I like to paint faces on miniatures first, tighten up the area around the face, and then watch it "come alive" as the rest of it is completed. Anyway, first off where some Tribal class destroyers, which are among my favourite WWII ships purely due to their names. Here are HMS Maori, Cossack and Ashanti:





















Along with Zulu, Tartar and Eskimo:





















This was my first attempt at painting any GHQ models and, even though these were small models and single-piece castings, I was very impressed with the details. I managed to find photos of all the ships online, so the camouflage schemes were as close as I could discern them to be. This was helped by my purchase of some AK Interactive WWII naval paint sets with ready-made colour palettes, which again were enjoyable to use.

Next up are a couple of heavy cruisers in HMS Suffolk and Cumberland. These involved gluing on the guns, superstructure, cranes and spotter plane which was fiddly, but made much easier as the pieces all fit perfectly and did not require any filing or drilling:










Next up I thought I'd turn my hand to a few battleships, with HMS Warspite (another long-time favourite of mine due to the unique angular superstructure:





















Then HMS Hood. I can remember my grandmother telling me that she went on board for an officer's dance a few days before it put out to sea to hunt the Bismarck, of course never to return having suffered a catastrophic explosion the result of which only three of the ship's complement of over one thousand four hundred survived. I wish now I had asked a few more questions, such as who she went with and where on the ship the dance was:













The last two are HMS Rodney, which I have always enjoyed due to the unique design which has always reminded me of a boot. This involved sticking on half a dozen 6" gun turrets with a pair of tweezers while trying to remind myself that this is supposed to be relaxation:











To finish off this first batch I then completed the Prince of Wales, with more 1/2400th secondary turrets to tweezer into place:











I was happy with the results for a first attempt and managed to get completion time down to between three to four hours per ship. I have since prepared a batch of eleven German warships which I am looking forward to getting stuck into, once I have finished the last of the Republican Romans.


12 comments:

  1. These ships are gorgeous, Lawrence, and really enhanced by your superb basing. Well done! I look forward to seeing this fine fleet in action one day.

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    1. Thanks Jonathan. I'm hoping I'll be able to convince the Monday-night crew to give it a go, with a suitable set of rules.

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  2. Now that's one heck of a change of pace, Lawrence. Very handsome ships!

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    1. Thanks Peter. Yes, I needed something a little different after wading through six hundred or so Romans.

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  3. Nice work Lawrence. I like the water effect.

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    1. Thanks Mark. I still have your tips on water effects which I intend to use for larger scale ships, but Ken the Yarkshire Gamer's tips worked really well for 1/2400 models.

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  4. Jonathan said it 'gorgeous' and 'superb'; I concur entirely. Beautiful ships to view. There is just the right amount of detail at 1/2400, to my mind.
    Regards, James

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    1. Cheers James. I couldn't agree more on 1/2400 providing just the right balance between playability and detail. I have just had a look at you blogs and there is some great stuff on there, by the way.

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  5. Very nice Lawrence - naval warfare isn't really my thing but that doesn't detract from the wonderful job you have done here. HMS Warspite is my all time favourite RN ship - my dad made and painted the Airfix version for me when I was five or six - suitably weighted with plasticine in the hull so it could float in the bath!

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    1. Thanks Keith. I hope to find a able set of suitable rules and will introduce a few aircraft to make it a little less two-dimensional. In the meantime though I am just enjoying assembling the kits and painting up the ships as an end in itself particularly, like yourself, I recognise so many of them from my youth.

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  6. Nice change of pace! Lovely ships, naval warfare doesn't really appeal for some reason but of course love Warspite, Rodney and the Tribal class destroyers!
    Best Iain

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    1. Thanks Iain. There was a set or rules we used to play back in the 80's that were fun and which I am hoping will have stood the test off time. It used to give a good game in about three hours without too much record-keeping, and didn't feel like it was just an artillery duel across a flat table with no terrain.

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