I do!!!I could spend all day browsing this forum :smiling2:
Same here and I often revisit old postsI do!!!
For me, it's partly because I'm new and partly learning from everyone else. I find reading the builds fascinating, the detail is just unbelievable!!Same here and I often revisit old posts
Well put @Jakko. I don't like to go off half cocked. As said, 45 years is a long time away from the world of plastic!! A lot has changed, products, materials, glues and paints!! When I last picked up a model in the early 70 - what was an airbrush?That’s just a normal part of the progression of AMS (Advanced Modeller Syndrome): at first the patient just build what’s in the box, paints it as directed, sticks the kit decals on, done — he then moves on to the next kit at the same speed. Slowly but surely, as AMS starts taking hold, he will be spending longer on a model because he will start looking into how it was actually done/used in the real world and trying to make his models more like that. The disease usually progresses to a stage where the patient spends ever more time poring over photographs, histories, forums and other sources, as well as thinking about how to replicate certain details that still aren’t clear to him despite all this research, and not actually building them until they are. The final stage of the affliction results in not building anything anymore in a fruitless search for information to make the model absolutely perfect in every last detail.

What he said!Just do what you wanna...
... It's ALL about enjoyment,(tis a hobby after all), ....
... Learn when you can, enjoy the new tips you get.... BUT ....
... Just BUILD STUFF!! .. no better way to learn than that!!![]()
That sounds like a very good plan! The only goal in this game is enjoyment. There’s too much stress in the world without inventing more….Had a long think about what I want to achieve.
Came to the conclusion I don't really want to be a 'Master Modeller'. I actually want to enjoy myself, do something I'm interested in and hopefully improve my skills. If I do manage to learn to master the airbrush along the way, that'll be nice but I'm prepared to admit defeat and brush away merrily. (After all the airbrush malarky cost me nada).
I do enjoy reading what the really skilled are doing on here - fascinating, but I don't see me ever getting to that sort of level. I know me! I know I get impatient and have been known to whack things with a hammer when not satisfied with the result!! Wife says it's the stormy Geordie coming out!!!
So I'll be pottering when I get a spare hour or so with my kits trying to build the best I can but mainly - enjoying the moment.
Stress - Won't argue with that!! Had enough - nows my quiet time!!That sounds like a very good plan! The only goal in this game is enjoyment. There’s too much stress in the world without inventing more….
but don't you think that researching is half the fun too?That's the problem, so much 'research', so little building.
I do, but then I think oh - nothing done, again.but don't you think that researching is half the fun too?
A lot of that rang true for me when I was last making models in my youth. I got my kicks out of the build. Painting was a plus - sometimes.I think building and researching go hand in hand if you want to go further and know about the subject you're building. That's for me but it only goes as far as...was it in use in such and such a time. What were their characteristics in the field, who used them and were there many versions. I will only correct glaring mistakes but most of the time am happy just to BOOB.
I occasionally like to just stick things together without painting or just dry fitting. I would change genres when the fancy hits me either from just watching a movie or flipping through old catalogs. I like a challenging kit. I only finish a build if I set a deadline for myself. GBs are great but a distraction for me as 3 months is too short a time for anything to be built to the way its meant to be for me that is. As you can see it's a hobby for me.
Cheers,
Wabble
I'm with you on this, just have too much on my plate to give my modelling the amount of time I'd like to have! What with the school and other major projects I'm working more than I did before retirement!!Had a long think about what I want to achieve.
Came to the conclusion I don't really want to be a 'Master Modeller'. I actually want to enjoy myself, do something I'm interested in and hopefully improve my skills. If I do manage to learn to master the airbrush along the way, that'll be nice but I'm prepared to admit defeat and brush away merrily. (After all the airbrush malarky cost me nada).
I do enjoy reading what the really skilled are doing on here - fascinating, but I don't see me ever getting to that sort of level. I know me! I know I get impatient and have been known to whack things with a hammer when not satisfied with the result!! Wife says it's the stormy Geordie coming out!!!
So I'll be pottering when I get a spare hour or so with my kits trying to build the best I can but mainly - enjoying the moment.
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