Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
I say go with the current view. It gives a much better impression on what's there and it just plain looks better.
What Erik says is technically correct, but that particular bit of the standards has by and large been abandoned.
_________________ “Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Posts:7510 Joined: July 28th, 2010, 12:25 pm
Location: the netherlands
also, rigging that has to support sails often can be rotated to get the wind an better angle of attack (weird way to put it in words,I know, my english knowledge leaves me atm) so while not as extreme as this, you can show the spars. that is the way I like most: with the spars in 45 degrees angle with the centerline..... but that also is about the hardest one to draw
_________________ Drawings are credited with J.Scholtens
I ask of you to prove me wrong. Not say I am wrong, but prove it, because then I will have learned something new. Shipbucket Wiki admin
Posts:1587 Joined: November 22nd, 2011, 4:47 am
Location: Marietta, Georgia - USA
Thanks for the advise, all of you. I'll be getting back to this once I finish a Doctor Who project my wife has set me upon.
I'm starting to think it may just have been easier to do a "sails only" version and leave it at that, but I wanted both sails and no sails. Eventually, I'd also like to do the Boston as she appeared during the Spanish-American war
_________________ "Anybody remotely interesting is mad in some way." - The Seventh Doctor
I draw them port-and-starboard, but the majority of my drawings are of later model ships where yardarms and rigging aren't really of that much importance.
I think for these older ships and for sailing ships it's not bad practice, but for modern ships it's best to show them port-and-starboard.
Posts:1587 Joined: November 22nd, 2011, 4:47 am
Location: Marietta, Georgia - USA
Updated the drawing, hopefully corrected the problems with the masts. Again, with the rigging, I just tried to follow photos from the period of the ship itself. In several cases, they had double lines, but I just did a single one represent the set, else it might turn into a big grey blob from all the multiple rigging lines. I also changed the color of the masts and spars from the yellow to black (dk. grey) as in the pics they appear quite a bit darker than the funnels.
_________________ "Anybody remotely interesting is mad in some way." - The Seventh Doctor
Posts:3220 Joined: August 16th, 2010, 7:45 am
Location: Cambridge United Kingdom
I've done both: angled and port-and-starboard; and while the first looks nice, the second is more accurate. Overall I'd agree with Colo, that for modern warships port-and-starboard seems more appropriate, but no rules now on this one
Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
Like I said before, stick to three-colour shading rather than five and tone down the shading on the funnel. Right now it looks like they have an almost mirror like reflective surface, rather than the matte yellow they had in reality.
You're missing the black waterline.
You have overlapping black pixels in the masts and under the boats that can be eliminated easily and the yards doesn't doesn't "line up" with the stays and wires.
_________________ “Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error