Just some initial points
1- Doubling up of lines and being rounded rather undoes the stealthy profile you seem to be going for, angled is far better, I'm not sure about deck penetration for RAM but I'm betting you could bolt directly to the hangar roof
2- too "hard" an angle, look at ships like Lafayette and Nansen, they have superstructure faces closer to vertical, (~12-25 deg from vertical)
3- re: being stealthy, avoid straight vertical surfaces
4- hard angles as well confusing shading, this seems to mean this section is also angled backwards
5-no shading under overhand (also the bridge windows are unmatched to the angles they represent with shading )
6-if you have to move this, you have a too small template, maybe XL
7- Panama bows should be deck mounted not on the bulwark unless you want to bend the life out of it, ditto the nearby door as it looks like its 4ft above the deck
Also a lot of inconsistent lines on the ships, mostly lack lines where grey would make more sense due to angles and there's about 5 different shades of said lines going on. Is this the original spruced up or an new one for the ground as it has the hall marks of a drawing from a few years back with newer parts and some work on top.
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Work list(Current)
Miscellaneous|
Victorian Colonial Navy|
Murray Riverboats|
Colony of Victoria AU|
Project Sail-fixing SB's sail shortage
How to mentally pronounce my usernameRow-(as in a boat)Don-(as in the short form of Donald)Dough-(bread)
"Loitering on the High Seas" (Named after the good ship Rodondo)
There's no such thing as "
nothing left to draw" If you can down 10 pints and draw, you're doing alright by my standards