You guys remember those absurdly named midships DD's and even worse fitting kits? Well, I now understand why those of you who have built them up ranted, raved and screamed about them so much. I just completed a "Benham" as the USS Henley. Almost nothing fits right on the kit necessitating so much modifying and scratch-building as to make me seriously think about burning the other 9 midships DD kits I have.....but not quite. The one thing I can honestly say that WAS GOOD about them: They really challenge your ability to make parts adaptable yet still keep their accuracy. In some respects I think I succeed and in others, not so much. All-in-all I must say that these kits have taught me the 2 greatest modeling lesson I've learned thus far:
1. If you are really serious about improving a skill set and building technique, you need to practice them on projects that are NOT straight forward or simple and don't be afraid to experiment a bit.
2. Build and paint in multiple sub-assemblies. For some of you this is a "duh" statement but I've done final assemblies and painting on most of my small ships with the mods and etch already attached. You lose a LOT of definition even after just ONE coat of paint in 1/700 scale and 2 or 3 coats just destroy intricacies. I thought I was hallucinating and did not follow this hunch on the Henley build, attempted to be extra careful with the paint and STILL ended up covering a lot of my hard work. SO, that settled it, I'm completely changing my build style and I must say.. so far... with my Nagara build... it is WORKING WONDERS! I'm so happy I actually learned something helpful.
I'll get some photos sent in sometime. Heck, I still have to photo my Amatsukaze and finish the Nagara while I'm at it.
edit: oh yea, one more thing I wholeheartedly encourage - Use Photoetch by the bushel basket load. Cram as much of that yellow metal on as you possibly can. Make your model CHOKE on the stuff.

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The closer the correspondence between a man's perception of reality and reality itself, the greater the man. - Renato Constantino
