Posts:7510 Joined: July 28th, 2010, 12:25 pm
Location: the netherlands
yes, line drawings.
but line drawings do not show everything that was visible on the real ship, of course. to get more details, you work with pictures, hundreds of them. all the ones you can gather, and you will in with knowledge what you cannot find on pictures or drawings. that is what defines the true masters of shipbucket style, and is what is aimed at by Whyme and KimWerner
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Yup - tracing a plan doesn't make a drawing. A lot of lineart is incorrect in many ways already, so it's your job to cross reference with photographs of the actual thing to make sure it's right.
Posts:440 Joined: January 18th, 2012, 9:09 pm
Location: Virginia, USA
^what they have stated should be in the ship bucket bible. BB and WhyMe would probably concur with me. When it came to drawing Japanese vessels, there were a lot of line drawings which, though they had the general characteristics, were vague in terms of nitpick things like davits, railing, markings, hatches, and other fine details. Its likely that some of the line drawings of older US battlewagons are also susceptible to the same shortcomings.
... Dont get me wrong, you are doing a fantastic job in recreating these old bathtubs.
I have no idea if these drawings are inaccurate (they certainly don't look or feel that way)... just adding my +1 in support of Mr. WhyMe's post in that I think that sort of consideration is useful for any real life drawing.
You should see the extent to which I am redrawing the Alaska...
These drawings look great to me (classic SB style). Details are good but only accurate details, I don't want anyone to feel pressured to clutter up drawings with what might look good but not actually really there.
Good photos of older ships are harder to find, while excellent close-up photos of ships from the 1930s onwards can be found, for the period 1900-1930 camera technology often can't capture the detail needed, especially with fuzziness and dark shadows. Finding pictures taken aboard ships helps but then you only get small areas of detail compared to the rest of the ship. Therefore, I feel its up to the artist to add what details they feel accurately portray reality. For the later versions of these ships I reckon improvements could be made, the older drawings of their original appearance perhaps less so. Maybe working backwards to determine subsequent changes might help?
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Posts:2129 Joined: November 8th, 2010, 3:07 pm
Location: Norseland
I am planning to look over the pictures to see if there is anything I`ve missed. As Hood pointed out, good photos of the ships during WWI are rare, and the ones that do exist are at an angle that do not reveal that which I seek.
Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
Are they there in real life?
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Posts:2129 Joined: November 8th, 2010, 3:07 pm
Location: Norseland
The New York class like the previous ships had completely straigth turrets, while the Nevada and Pennsylvania classes had a sort of bump added on the sides that gradually extends from the roof to the barbette.