And I sometimes pick my projects by the size of the box. Biggest box wins. Which is why the current workbench occupant is a Thomas Kinkade cottage presented to me in a box with some acrylic paints and purchased from a cheap bookshop - the place that things that don't sell go to die.
In the box is a rather nicely moulded resin cottage. No one will mistake it as an example of a building nicked from Pendon. It's more in the style of a "collectible" sourced from the back of a Sunday newspapers free magazine. Pretty enough but a bit cartooney. Incidentally, Thomas Kinkade is apparently a real person, a highly collected artist no less. Although the web site doesn't mention it he even produces, via Bachmann, a range of On30 train sets and rolling stock intended for those Americans who feel the need of a model railway around the Christmas tree.
The model in my hands is obviously the by-product of the huge Kinkade empire. It's a sort of paint by numbers kit except you are colouring a 3D object and there are no numbers, just a sheet of instructions.
Never mind - I like painting things and this looks good relaxing evening entertainment as I get used to the daily commute. Who knows, perhaps it will inspire me to get out the casting gear and make my own Sunday Supplement Specials !
1 comment:
I must confess to having a couple of little cottages like that on my shelf in the workshop..they were free with tea, as I remember. Something to do with that fascination we model makers have with tiny worlds, I guess.
Years ago, a customer asked me to build him a large terminal station building in 4mm, but he wanted me to use a job lot of Superquick police station kits that he had bought cheaply, and some of the Airfix canopies that had "Gamages" labels on them! He'd had those a while. Inwardly, I turned my snobby finescale nose up, but money is money, so I got on with the job. And boy, did I enjoy it! It was such fun. As you say, I wasn't agonising over millimetres or accuracy...it was relaxing. I think that's what a hobby is supposed to be, too. I'll have to get one!
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