I have a variety of naval projects on the go, and this is the first post from a new 1/2400 Anglo-Dutch Wars project. I have 4 yachts which I am entering in my own Challenge Location Douglas' Shallows under the theme "Messing About in Boats".
These are 4 yachts from the Tumbling Dice 1/2400 Anglo-Dutch Wars range. I have a couple of squadrons of these ships which I am aiming to complete over the challenge. So far I have been very happy with the quality of these castings.
Leading the race we have two English Royal Yachts the Katherine and Henrietta skippered by two gentlemen who knew a lot about boars, and a lot about messing about too!. Charles II and his brother James (Duke of York and Lord High Admiral at this point) were keen and skilled yachtsmen and Charles commissioned a series of yachts. Charles yachts were used for pleasure and actively sailed and raced by the Stuart bros. They were also armed and used as scouts and dispatch vessels in wartime and took Admiralty officials to inspect the port of Tangier.
I’ve selected two that served in the Second Dutch War as that’s my chosen niche in time.
By the third war Charles had two yachts some named for his mistresses (Cleveland and Portsmouth) one named for his mistress's anatomy (Fubbs being Restoration English for pleasantly plump) and one named Kitchen to provide victuals while cruising.
A Van de Velde painting of Charles arriving by yacht to inspect the fleet in 1672. |
His Majesty’s yacht Katherine launched 1660, captured by the Dutch 1673. Returned to the English but not as part of the Royal Navy. Armed with 8 guns. 49 feet long on the keel. |
His majesty’s yacht Henrietta launched 1663 and sunk at the Battle of the Texel in 1673. 52 feet long on the keel and armed with 8 guns. |
On the Dutch side we the Windhund and Schiedam, both of which were attached to De Ruyter’s fleet for the Four Days Battle of 1666. No royal connections here, but another good story. The maritime artist Willem Van de Velde (sr) was given a galjoot and accompanied De Ruyter in battle. He sketched from the decks of his small craft in the heat of battle, like an earlier Robert Capa on Omaha Beach. His sketches are used to reconstruct battles given the inconsistencies in memories.
The two dutch galjoots. Not being royal yachts there is not a lot available on these vessels. |
A Van de Velde sketch from the first day of the Four Days Battle. I was tempted to use an umber wash over cream bases on my ships to replicate the two tone effect in these wonderful works. |
Detail of another sketch from the same action showing Van de Velde on his galjoot. |
As these were the first models for a new project I did some experimenting. I wanted to replicate the greenish hue that Dutch maritime artists give the water in almost every oil painting. It took several layers, but I am reasonably happy with my results. I also wanted to use mdf bases ( these ones are 30mm square from Sarissa), but wanted to use the moulded bases supplied b6 Tumbling Dice on top of these. This means using acrylic gel to bulk up my paint to smooth over the rough base edges, and it looks ok on these ships but I think that I’ve left myself room for improvement
.
Canadian loonie and UK pound to show the size of these ships. |
From DaveD
Ah lets sail into the new year with Peters little boats! Oh my they are small alright , but wonderfully done. I will go with 3 points a piece
Nice little yachts, Peter :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Tamsin.
DeleteLovely ships, this year's smallest entry 🤔
ReplyDeleteThanks Ken. This years challenge is going to be a grazing event for me, small bites from many plates.
DeleteCool stuff on these tiny ships
ReplyDeleteCheers Martin
DeleteThanks very much Dave, I was quite happy with the end results.
ReplyDeleteLooking good! Love the background stories too. One litte thing: if you get the chance you might want to change the U in your Windhund to get the Dutch Windhond in stead of the German one ;-). But great little models these!
ReplyDeleteThanks Emjenic. Epic fail on my part, I will do up a new label with the next batch of printing.
DeleteA spelling mistake and Peter? This combination NEVER happens... ;)
DeleteI was trying to come up with some clever mistyped remark, but autocorrect wouldn’t let me misspell anything! Where are you when I need you?
DeleteLovely looking yachts and great basing!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks very much Iain. Cheers, Peter
DeleteNice work Pete. I have some 1/2400 TD Napoleonic Naval in the backlog that may get painted this challenge.
ReplyDeleteThanks Paul. I’ve got lots more TD stuff on the workbench. I’ve had issues with modelling sailing ships in the past due to my limited skills sets and the fiddly delicate nature of the rigging. So far the TD is proving within my skill set and more durable.
DeleteExcellent work Peter and a great period! I like the flags and the water effects. Just as a suggestion: you may want to think about thinner labels as I find from my experiments that they have a tendency of overpowering the models themselves. I think I have some TD in the lead pile and may try to do a few to partner up with yours.
DeleteCheers Curt. I may trim down the labels next time around, but also want to have them legible for my aged eyes (you’ve seen me without reading glasses). Glad to have you aboard on this journey. When you get to christening ships shoot me a note so we that we aren’t replicating ships. With fillets of a hundred per side that should be easily accomplished. There’s also the French who allied with the Dutch in the 2nd war and the Brits in the 3rd. I can also point you to some good resource books.
DeleteNice looking boats! Really like the basing.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much.
Deleteexcellent work on such teeny-tiny ships!
ReplyDeleteCheers Jamie.
DeleteSuperb effort on such small models - incredible (I struggle with 15mm!)
ReplyDeleteThanks Peter. My eyes find 15s too much of a challenge now, but these weren’t too bad. You have to go for the big picture and use the two foot rule.
DeleteThey’re tiny!
ReplyDeleteYep, I figured I’d start small and move up.
Delete