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Model Achievements
Heraldry as an
art form is not only pattern, colour and virile draughtsmanship. It has, in
its original state, form, texture and movement. The
cold weight of iron, the feel of hardened leather and the
qualities of carved wood, all enlivened by the fluttering of coloured cloth,
come together to form the basis of what so many of us delight in as heraldic
artwork. Perhaps this is why those of us
who draw and paint heraldry
sometimes feel that when the painting is finished it is still
incomplete. Something is lacking - it is
two-dimensional.
These little
models are an attempt to capture at least some of this missing quality and
to express something of the mass and movement, the colour and
the textures of heraldry. Constructed
from the bits and pieces, the
offcuts of paper, vellum, card and wood accumulated while working in the studio,
they are painted in gouache colours and stand about five or six inches high
when finished and assembled.
Little
equipment is needed to make them. A sharp blade, some fine sandpaper, rat tail
files, a tube of fast-drying glue and a small drill. For
colouring, a couple of small sable brushes and a few tubes of
gouache colour. When making the model it is important to paint each piece
before assembly. The amount of detailed painting could be done
only with considerable difficulty if the
model was
assembled before painting!

Carve the helm
from a piece of hardwood. Then drill a hole in the crown and another in
the underneath face of the helm. The hole in the
crown will accommodate the spike which in turn
supports the crest. The hole
underneath will take the upright pole on which the whole assembly is mounted. The
crest is made from wood or paper or, indeed, any suitable fragment of material
which is to hand. Throughout my collection of models there is a
remarkable variety of materials to be
found ranging from fuse wire to
gold embossed cake frilling. On one occasion split lentils were used to yield
a suitably textured surface! Wings, crowns, mantling etc., are made of paper"
and bent into shape. Shields are of wood using a close-grained
hardwood, sometimes augmented with
surface laid paper (for labels
etc). The shield is then attached to the upright dowel which is, in
turn, set into the wooden base. This dowelling (l/8th inch, 3mm)
is ideal for this upright and for the little
spike holding crest to helm. Ramin
or lime are ideal woods but balsa should be avoided.
The only other
essential requirements are - patience, and an understanding wife who will
tolerate shavings on the carpet and provide sympathy when the wood
splits! §
John Ferguson
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