No, the Shifter isn't finished, but while the gloss varnish cures I'm following my interest and starting work on the Ensminger Building, beginning with the elaborate veranda. I'm using parts that aren't an exact match but follow the "rule of cool" and the spirit of kitbashing, using something I've already got in stock at the home hobby shop. This is the Scale Structures Limited Gazebo kit, from which I'll be using the fancy posts and arched lattice detail, the ornate railing and the scribed floor plank sheet.
| Let the filing begin! |
The original kit instructions call for filing away a 30-35 degree angle from the rear of each upright post on the arched lattice sections in order to butt them together and create the illusion that two posts are in fact one. I've got issues with this approach. On the original model this would result in an unsightly gap behind the "post", where the two almost-halves meet. In no gazebo ever have I seen two posts joined in this way as one conjoined post, but rather a single turned wood post is used with the railings attached to it. This is what the drawings show but you'd have trouble making the kit parts align properly building it as instructed.
| Getting closer... |
However for my application of the parts, where the posts will be filed on a 45 degree bevel, the resulting post will indeed be just that - a single post comprised of two actual post halves. I'll have a gap to deal with no matter how carefully and accurately I file them down but I can fix that with putty. Where two arched lattice sections meet I'd need to either remove one post entirely or file away half of each post again, but this time producing a gap that's harder to hide. For that reason I elected to remove one post and fill any gaps on that joint as needed. The trick of course is to file slightly more from behind so the front is a tight fit, but there's that unsightly gap issue again. Sure, it is unlikely to be seen from a normal viewing angle but I'll know it's there!
| Almost there (note, they're upside down) |
The front veranda is deep - as deep as one arched lattice section - while the side veranda is shallower. This works out well as the SS Ltd kit comes with 6 arched lattice sections. I'll use 4 for the front veranda, 2 for the side veranda. It also includes six sections of ornate railing which also must be shortened on each end to fit between the posts - note, this is what the original kit calls for! I'll need all six and then some short bits which is fine since I've got a set of shorter railings, identical to the kit parts except half as long, which I'll use for the sides of the shallower veranda.
| Section on the right de-flashed |
I'd love to know what structure these parts were originally designed for, because the kluge required to turn these parts into a gazebo seems challenging. However, it is often required of the kitbasher, indeed incumbent upon the modeler to see beyond the part as intended into the future purpose of the part as yet unknown. In that respect I admire Jon Stetz, the designer of the SS Ltd Gazebo, for his creative use of such beautiful parts. Perhaps my creative re-use of these parts might someday inspire another modeler to go and do likewise.
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