It's fantastic that you still have the old children's films from the past. I see a lot in common, I was born in Germany in 1961 and I still build model airplanes to this day. Even professionally, airplanes have never let go of me, I've been with the German Air Force for 42 years, 38 years as a crash rescue firefighter. Greetings from Germany Ed
I was totally immersed in your story, It reminded me so much of my late father who was an RAF veteran in Nth Africa during WW2 and later returned to photography in Manchester and emigrated some years later to Australia to open a Camera & Hobby Centre in Ballarat. My childhood was full of aircraft models and humbrol paints as well as a fair array of Balsa wood, as it was just too expensive for customers to buy in the 70's. I migrated from planes and trains to WW2 tanks and infantry, painstakingly assembled and painting faces on 1/64 scale soldiers. My father would drop me off to a group of friends on a Saturday afternoon where I met up with others with a similar box of army soldiers and tanks, a dice and a ruler included where we would battle on home made diorama for hours, each piece could move a proportionate distance when it was your turn and a hit of miss was governed by strategic throws of the dice, this of course would be boring by todays standards of excitement but the inner child in me would love to relive that time, albeit somewhat tougher to get down on the floor for several hours. Thank you for sharing your indulgence Andrew, it certainly sparked some wonderful memories of my own. Regards from the East.
WONDERFUL. I,m 68 and didi the same things you did growing up. Spent my childhood,building and flying RC airplanes and boats,and building models of them. What a GREAT time to grow up. My brother went on to become a pilot,and i spent my time on boats. Both sailing and motor, doing underwater photography around the World. Spent a month in Austraila,years ago. Enjoy your videos very much,keep them coming.
As a Sussex local I’d like to correct you on pronunciation of arundel. Arran dl. Love the models, you’re quite right when you say the satisfaction is ongoing, not just at the completion. Going to bed with your brain chewing over a process and coming up with a neat , relatively simple and easy solution is a nice way to fall asleep.
Absolutely brilliant you made hand built modelling come to life, 24 minutes of heaven. No repeating (saying the same words over and over) yourself, speaking quietly and calmly. This is the best video I have seen you do.
Hello from Germany, great Video , I am Born 1961 , and I have exakt the same experiences with Airfix and other Model Kits like you . I was the whole Life interested in Airplanes , and I am now 37 years Crash Rescue Firefighter in the German Airforce. Greetings Edward
Andrew, I was born in 1951, and grew up in West Wickham, I used to collect ship deck plans during my youth and had ambitions to become a Navigating Officer in the Merchant Navy when I left school. However, despite gaining a place at the King Edward VII Nautical College, I was unable to take up my place, after failing the Board of Trade eyesight test. I then decided to join the Royal Navy as an Artificer Apprentice. At the same time a school friend joined the Ben Line as an engineering cadet, as spent his first years on vessels carrying bananas out of Cape Town. I well remember my dad taking me to see the Biggin Hill Airshow, a number of times around the late 50s and early 60s, and your film brought back many happy memories. Not having a car we walked the few miles across Hayes Common and Keston Common to RAF Biggin Hill. My dad's mother lived in a small house in Greenwich, we would visit often, on the 47 bus from Bromley, I would regularly visit The Royal Observatory, and the Cutty Sark, and on occasion I would also visit the National Maritime Museum. Viewing their collection of model ships was always a most enjoyable pastime, and they were all crafted to the highest standard. Revisiting years later with my youngest son, I was dismayed to find that the ship model collection had been placed in storage, although I was told that some had been transferred to Chatham Dockyard. Visiting there a few years later I found that only a fraction of those were on public display. I have since found that the bulk of the Maritime Museum collection is in storage, but can be viewed by appointment. Something that was not known at the time. www.rmg.co.uk/collections/our-collection-worlds-largest-ship-model-collection. This would be well worth a visit. I imagine that travelling as you did with your family would have been very exciting for you and your brothers. Your video was a fascinating insight into your hobby as you grew up.
Bonjour et merci pour votre vidéo Je me suis retrouvé dans vos archives de famille quand J était enfant et que mes maquettes prenaient leur envol😭 Aujourd'hui à 57 ans je construit toujours comme vous Merci pour ces jolis souvenirs Jean Luc
The level of model building as a hobby has risen so much in the last decade thanks to social media it is mind boggling. So many young builders with UA-cam channels who all do things that would have blown my mind when I was struggling with my model kits as a kid.
You bring a smile to my face understanding that your parents encouraged your creativity all through childhood. …and you found a woman who understands, respects, and share your passion. ❤️ - Now I understand why you’re so creative and meticulous when it comes to your vehicles. You impress me.
The comment about the little rewards all the way through the build is a good explanation. Love solving the little problems. It all comes together at the end.
Faantastic video. Why would anyone watch television when they can get content of this quality on UA-cam. I have built many kit motorcycles in the past. I am thinking of getting back into it. Model building is one of the most rewarding things I have ever done.
Brings back distant memories growing up in England. I built a harrier, Japanese zero, spitfire. Look those airfix model. Funny how a childhood becomes a career.
Amazing collection and brilliant video👍 I build model RC trucks and 100% agree with you on the small rewards along the building process. I got rid of my TV 7 years ago and have enjoyed working on my models ever since.
Marvelous video and beautiful models. As a child, I lived in Northern Rhodesia and we had two trips on Union Castle ships. The first I believe was on the Bloemfontein Castle and the second was from Durban back to the UK on the Rhodesia Castle. I loved that ship and the journey. They were real ships with a mix of passengers and freight so there was always a lot of activity when they called in at various ports on the way. I spotted the distinctive lilac coloured hull of a Union Castle ship in the thumbnail of your video which is why I clicked on it in the first place.
Thankyou for sharing. This was a lovely salute to your family, your parents and your brothers. As the eldest of three brothers, your storey brought back to me some great memories of growing up with them.
From a boy I have always been into building model planes, particularly from World War 2. I am much older now but watching you video has inspired me to get back into it! Bravo! Thank you for the video and the inspiration!
75 now, been building models for at least 65 yrs, remember building 3 Airfix HMS Cossacks, and one of my favourites USS Constitution, went on eventually to scratch build Boats, it’s helped keep me sane.
Totally mesmerising....I used to work on the cruise liners ,Sterling Castle,Arcadia,Orcades just to name a few,talk about a trip down memory lane.....Thank you .....👍🏻
Thoroughly enjoyed this - I followed a similar path building many kits as a youngster, mostly 1/25 big rig trucks and some of Tamiya's 1/35 military vehicles. Although I used liquid cement rather than tube cement, "glue bomb" still is the best description for most of my models back then! Brushed on paints were the order of the day, usually Testors in the little square bottles. Occasionally a tin of Humbrol would find its way into the collection - living in Canada, I thought of Humbrol as a rather exotic overseas brand! HO scale model railroading became a hobby interest for a years in my early teens, then model building faded away for many years after I completed high school. I did drive big rig trucks for a few years and there were a couple attempts to replicate tractors I drove in scale model form but none of them got very far. In the early 2000's N scale model railroading caught my eye and I became active in that field again. Around 2010 I started seeing reissues of AMT's 1/25 truck kits and bought one which I had not built when I was younger, the 40' flatbed trailer. This brought me back into the model truck hobby which I have been active with ever since. A few of them are here: ua-cam.com/video/nGENje_4LAo/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/PwFs5rOG_LM/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/MXQstqBMepo/v-deo.html In "Building Model Trucks", an early 1970's book by Phil Jensen, the author mentions reviewing his "shelf full of kits" in one of the chapters. I received a copy of this book as a gift one year (I think for Christmas), back then I couldn't envision a shelf full of kits as those were items I received one at a time, either as gifts or, as you mention in your video, purchased with saved up dollars. Now I do have a "shelf full of kits" and have slowed down on the kit collecting front - it is time to build some of them!
Hi, thoroughly enjoyed this short film. My Nan used to work at the Airfix factory so Christmas was a time we got the kits that were ordinarily out of reach of our pocket money. Sometimes my Nan would buy models that were discontinued for pennies rather than see them get melted down - I once built a squadron of RE8s this way as they were just 2p each! We also had pretty much every Airfix toy they made too! I carried on making model kits until I was about 16 then under much pressure to 'grow up' I eventually stopped. Years later though I built some of them again with my son but only have 2 left; a 1/72nd scale Spitfire and the Apollo 11 rocket. Fond memories...thanks.
Wonderful video, thanks. I'm just getting back into aircraft model building after many years and envy you your long, unbroken innings. Pure joy I image, especially with your brothers also involved. We sailed on the SS Oceanbreeze which was an extremely beautiful ship even among the jazzy new megaliners. It started out as the SS Southern Cross, sailing between the UK and Australia in the 50s. From what I read, it was a revolutionary design. Easy to see how you love these ships.
You are gifted my friend,a facinating hobby. In the 1960s as soon as i had enough money i used to buy a airfix kit. I had no money for paint and put the decals on grey plastic. I now buy built models from ebay. Im 61 now and cant see well enough to build my own kit.
That's really a very nice hobby you have and very detailed and good model ships. Thank you very much for sharing this clip very interested and well done for your beautiful work.
Hi there my father was in the RAF and I worked at Biggin Hill I grew up in Chelsfield and now live in Canada . I have a huge collection of vintage Airfix kits . Your channel is amazing ty .
Lots of resonance here. My grandparents travelled on Union Castle, and on the the Vaal. My bro + I collected Airfix models - Canberra, Q Eliz, Bismarck, Hood, Englsih Elec Lightning, VC10 - &c - when we lived in Dar-es-Salaam. We sailed on the Lloyd Triestino 'Asia' when my father took his home leave entitlement. En route we saw Chusan, Northern Star & Ocean Monarch, and we stopped to take aboard a stow-away from our sister ship 'Africa'. Happy days.
Don't know why UA-cam recommended this Video but watching your childhood pictures reminded me of my time as a child building warplane sets , I never got as far as to paint them though .Talking of warplanes a little story if anybody cares , before I built models I liked drawing them so one day at home doing my homework I got distracted and started drawing a dogfight between a Spitfire and a Messerschmitt of course the Messerschmitt was going down in flames . The next day im primary school my maths teacher was checking our homework and as I opened my excercise book I realized I had drawn the whole thing in my book I can't remember her facial expression but she was not pleased to say the least all I remember hearing her say was consequences and having a word with my class teacher . So when school ended that day and everybody in my class could go home I had to go and see my teacher .As I opened the door to my class he was sitting on a chair waiting for me he must have been in his 60s greyish hair with a matching mustache a little bit like Albert Einstein but better groomed , he was smiling and asked me to come closer I was so confused because I was expecting a beasting not a smile . As I sat on his lap he started explaining to me im a calm voice the bad things that had happened and that I shouldn't draw things in my exercise book especially warplanes with swastikas all over them as we are in Germany and it is not allowed to draw that symbol . Maybe I got off so lightly because I was a brit but I like to think that Mr.Wolf was simply a cool person and he would have been the same with a German child or maybe it was because he served in the Wehrmacht who knows .
I built that Helldiver kit! My family drove down to Harlingen, Texas to attend the Airsho '79, and the Confederate Air Force had the Helldiver on display and I fell in love with that plane. If I recall, it didn't fly but we were able to walk right up to it and they had assembled some elevated stairs and we were able to get up and have a look at the cockpits, front and rear. Being a little kid, that plane was enormous. I remember I bought an Airfix Helldiver model kit a short while later. Ha! The C-130 was another favorite of mine as well!
I thoroughly enjoyed your video and I agree, that it is far better than watching mindless television. I had stopped building models for close to 30 years and have recently gotten back into the hobby, with armor kits of all things. And you are correct, the quality of these kits from that of those from the 70s and 80s is magnitudes better.
Really impressive! Thank you for sharing the story of your modeling evolution. For sure a much better way to spend time than watching mindless TV. Very inspiring to those of us who are at the beginning of the modelling hobby!
Wow how amazing. I am a ship modeller myself. As a kid I built kits, until got married in 1974 and began on scratch build models in card. Won't go in detail as this vid explains a lot of the hobby.
my little brother and I had a similar childhood. we were obsessed with models. cars, jets, tanks, ships and planes. I got into it a bit more but this biography brought me back to my childhood, bigtime
This was beautiful. I have recently got back into model kits in my adult life - partly for photography purposes, partly for the sheer fun of building something with my hands! Thanks for sharing this.
I grew up in Durban and the Union - Castle liners were a daily feature of my life. Travelled on Windsor Castle twice. Love passenger liners and collect die cast 1:1250 models but wasn’t very successful at building them. Yours are superb! Would love to see them one day. And the Canberra is superb. Thank you for this!
It's fantastic that you still have the old children's films from the past. I see a lot in common, I was born in Germany in 1961 and I still build model airplanes to this day. Even professionally, airplanes have never let go of me, I've been with the German Air Force for 42 years, 38 years as a crash rescue firefighter. Greetings from Germany Ed
I envy you your childhood! Great work!!
I was totally immersed in your story, It reminded me so much of my late father who was an RAF veteran in Nth Africa during WW2 and later returned to photography in Manchester and emigrated some years later to Australia to open a Camera & Hobby Centre in Ballarat. My childhood was full of aircraft models and humbrol paints as well as a fair array of Balsa wood, as it was just too expensive for customers to buy in the 70's. I migrated from planes and trains to WW2 tanks and infantry, painstakingly assembled and painting faces on 1/64 scale soldiers. My father would drop me off to a group of friends on a Saturday afternoon where I met up with others with a similar box of army soldiers and tanks, a dice and a ruler included where we would battle on home made diorama for hours, each piece could move a proportionate distance when it was your turn and a hit of miss was governed by strategic throws of the dice, this of course would be boring by todays standards of excitement but the inner child in me would love to relive that time, albeit somewhat tougher to get down on the floor for several hours. Thank you for sharing your indulgence Andrew, it certainly sparked some wonderful memories of my own. Regards from the East.
WONDERFUL. I,m 68 and didi the same things you did growing up. Spent my childhood,building and flying RC airplanes and boats,and building models of them. What a GREAT time to grow up. My brother went on to become a pilot,and i spent my time on boats. Both sailing and motor, doing underwater photography around the World. Spent a month in Austraila,years ago. Enjoy your videos very much,keep them coming.
As a Sussex local I’d like to correct you on pronunciation of arundel. Arran dl.
Love the models, you’re quite right when you say the satisfaction is ongoing, not just at the completion. Going to bed with your brain chewing over a process and coming up with a neat , relatively simple and easy solution is a nice way to fall asleep.
Absolutely brilliant you made hand built modelling come to life, 24 minutes of heaven. No repeating (saying the same words over and over) yourself, speaking quietly and calmly. This is the best video I have seen you do.
You are the GOAT of model ship building.
Hello from Germany, great Video , I am Born 1961 , and I have exakt the same experiences with Airfix and other Model Kits like you . I was the whole Life interested in Airplanes , and I am now 37 years Crash Rescue Firefighter in the German Airforce. Greetings Edward
Andrew, I was born in 1951, and grew up in West Wickham, I used to collect ship deck plans during my youth and had ambitions to become a Navigating Officer in the Merchant Navy when I left school. However, despite gaining a place at the King Edward VII Nautical College, I was unable to take up my place, after failing the Board of Trade eyesight test. I then decided to join the Royal Navy as an Artificer Apprentice. At the same time a school friend joined the Ben Line as an engineering cadet, as spent his first years on vessels carrying bananas out of Cape Town.
I well remember my dad taking me to see the Biggin Hill Airshow, a number of times around the late 50s and early 60s, and your film brought back many happy memories. Not having a car we walked the few miles across Hayes Common and Keston Common to RAF Biggin Hill. My dad's mother lived in a small house in Greenwich, we would visit often, on the 47 bus from Bromley, I would regularly visit The Royal Observatory, and the Cutty Sark, and on occasion I would also visit the National Maritime Museum. Viewing their collection of model ships was always a most enjoyable pastime, and they were all crafted to the highest standard.
Revisiting years later with my youngest son, I was dismayed to find that the ship model collection had been placed in storage, although I was told that some had been transferred to Chatham Dockyard. Visiting there a few years later I found that only a fraction of those were on public display.
I have since found that the bulk of the Maritime Museum collection is in storage, but can be viewed by appointment. Something that was not known at the time.
www.rmg.co.uk/collections/our-collection-worlds-largest-ship-model-collection. This would be well worth a visit.
I imagine that travelling as you did with your family would have been very exciting for you and your brothers.
Your video was a fascinating insight into your hobby as you grew up.
Bonjour et merci pour votre vidéo
Je me suis retrouvé dans vos archives de famille quand J était enfant et que mes maquettes prenaient leur envol😭
Aujourd'hui à 57 ans je construit toujours comme vous
Merci pour ces jolis souvenirs
Jean Luc
The level of model building as a hobby has risen so much in the last decade thanks to social media it is mind boggling. So many young builders with UA-cam channels who all do things that would have blown my mind when I was struggling with my model kits as a kid.
Brings me back in time, A authentic warm docu of An artist Weldone.
This video should be on tv, it’s so good!
You bring a smile to my face understanding that your parents encouraged your creativity all through childhood. …and you found a woman who understands, respects, and share your passion. ❤️
- Now I understand why you’re so creative and meticulous when it comes to your vehicles. You impress me.
Just wonderful. Thank you. Took me back 60 years plus.
Dear Sir,
A Craftsman of Passion.
The comment about the little rewards all the way through the build is a good explanation. Love solving the little problems. It all comes together at the end.
Faantastic video. Why would anyone watch television when they can get content of this quality on UA-cam.
I have built many kit motorcycles in the past. I am thinking of getting back into it. Model building is one of the most rewarding things I have ever done.
David Attenborough of model building !! Thoroughly enjoyed watching, thanks ! 😉
I so very much enjoyed watching this today. Beautiful models, suburb workmanship.
As one ship modeler to another, I have to say how much of a thrill it is living vicariously through your models as well as enjoying mine.
Wonderful guy, wonderful stories and amazing models, great Airfix collection too 👍😀
Existe algo realmente especial em criar alguma coisa com as próprias mãos! AWE!
I enjoyed building the Hudson as a kid. Loved the plane ever since
Brings back distant memories growing up in England. I built a harrier, Japanese zero, spitfire. Look those airfix model. Funny how a childhood becomes a career.
I was born in 1970. I went to Finigley Airshows in the 70s! The Vulcan,the Lightening, Tornado jet plans love them!
Very good job Andrew !🙂
thanks for your lovely story great model building brings me back as a child loved airfix
Amazing collection and brilliant video👍 I build model RC trucks and 100% agree with you on the small rewards along the building process. I got rid of my TV 7 years ago and have enjoyed working on my models ever since.
Time for a Master Class. I'd sign up in a heartbeat! Fantastic work.
Instead of watching mindless television I enjoyed watching your story. Very rewarding hobby, thank you.
Beautiful builds.Truly gifted family.
Love your Castle Line ships. Very handsome vessels, beautifully modelled.
Marvelous video and beautiful models. As a child, I lived in Northern Rhodesia and we had two trips on Union Castle ships. The first I believe was on the Bloemfontein Castle and the second was from Durban back to the UK on the Rhodesia Castle. I loved that ship and the journey. They were real ships with a mix of passengers and freight so there was always a lot of activity when they called in at various ports on the way. I spotted the distinctive lilac coloured hull of a Union Castle ship in the thumbnail of your video which is why I clicked on it in the first place.
Thankyou for sharing. This was a lovely salute to your family, your parents and your brothers. As the eldest of three brothers, your storey brought back to me some great memories of growing up with them.
Stunning workmanship Andrew.
THAT WAS FANTASTIC!🙏👏👏
From a boy I have always been into building model planes, particularly from World War 2. I am much older now but watching you video has inspired me to get back into it! Bravo! Thank you for the video and the inspiration!
75 now, been building models for at least 65 yrs, remember building 3 Airfix HMS Cossacks, and one of my favourites USS Constitution, went on eventually to scratch build Boats, it’s helped keep me sane.
I enjoyed listening to your stories about model building with your brothers and your scratch building. Thanks for sharing.
Congratulations !! Amazing scratch-built models !
Love your work! You’re very good at modeling! ❤️❤️❤️🇨🇦
Well done Andrew ! I loved your Disco 4 challenge as well 👍🏻🙏🏻
What a delightful video which brought back many happy memories. Thank you very much!
Totally mesmerising....I used to work on the cruise liners ,Sterling Castle,Arcadia,Orcades just to name a few,talk about a trip down memory lane.....Thank you .....👍🏻
Thoroughly enjoyed this - I followed a similar path building many kits as a youngster, mostly 1/25 big rig trucks and some of Tamiya's 1/35 military vehicles. Although I used liquid cement rather than tube cement, "glue bomb" still is the best description for most of my models back then! Brushed on paints were the order of the day, usually Testors in the little square bottles. Occasionally a tin of Humbrol would find its way into the collection - living in Canada, I thought of Humbrol as a rather exotic overseas brand!
HO scale model railroading became a hobby interest for a years in my early teens, then model building faded away for many years after I completed high school. I did drive big rig trucks for a few years and there were a couple attempts to replicate tractors I drove in scale model form but none of them got very far.
In the early 2000's N scale model railroading caught my eye and I became active in that field again. Around 2010 I started seeing reissues of AMT's 1/25 truck kits and bought one which I had not built when I was younger, the 40' flatbed trailer. This brought me back into the model truck hobby which I have been active with ever since. A few of them are here:
ua-cam.com/video/nGENje_4LAo/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/PwFs5rOG_LM/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/MXQstqBMepo/v-deo.html
In "Building Model Trucks", an early 1970's book by Phil Jensen, the author mentions reviewing his "shelf full of kits" in one of the chapters. I received a copy of this book as a gift one year (I think for Christmas), back then I couldn't envision a shelf full of kits as those were items I received one at a time, either as gifts or, as you mention in your video, purchased with saved up dollars.
Now I do have a "shelf full of kits" and have slowed down on the kit collecting front - it is time to build some of them!
Excellent trip down Memory Lane for me. thank you.
Greatly enjoyed your presentation. Took me to my early childhood.
WOW! Appreciate the storytelling and production! Good show.
Hi, thoroughly enjoyed this short film. My Nan used to work at the Airfix factory so Christmas was a time we got the kits that were ordinarily out of reach of our pocket money. Sometimes my Nan would buy models that were discontinued for pennies rather than see them get melted down - I once built a squadron of RE8s this way as they were just 2p each! We also had pretty much every Airfix toy they made too! I carried on making model kits until I was about 16 then under much pressure to 'grow up' I eventually stopped. Years later though I built some of them again with my son but only have 2 left; a 1/72nd scale Spitfire and the Apollo 11 rocket. Fond memories...thanks.
I really hope you enjoy building those last two - (if you do).
@@jjs3287 I definitely will!
Going to an air show and buying a kit or one of those rubber band/ balsawood flyers. Ahh, memories. Thanks for the video!
Wonderful video, thanks. I'm just getting back into aircraft model building after many years and envy you your long, unbroken innings. Pure joy I image, especially with your brothers also involved. We sailed on the SS Oceanbreeze which was an extremely beautiful ship even among the jazzy new megaliners. It started out as the SS Southern Cross, sailing between the UK and Australia in the 50s. From what I read, it was a revolutionary design. Easy to see how you love these ships.
You are gifted my friend,a facinating hobby. In the 1960s as soon as i had enough money i used to buy a airfix kit. I had no money for paint and put the decals on grey plastic. I now buy built models from ebay. Im 61 now and cant see well enough to build my own kit.
Much respect & admiration sir. Well done.
A world that came to an end still lives on.
WHAT A WONDERFUL TALENT YOU HAVE! Thank you so much...Judy in Nova Scotia, Canada
Enjoyed your story & video. Your ships are wonderful as is your family.
Absolutely fascinating presentation! Cheers!
A lovely family! All of your guys are model lover!
Bloody hell that bought back memories. I grew up with Airfix kits. Superglue all over the place.
I build to keep History alive and it keeps me Sane
Brilliant......and great building..i envy your talent
I really enjoyed discovering your story and beautiful models. Thank you
you're a true artist! bravo!
I loved all of that mate ,so many ocean lines that l have never seen ,you have done an excellent job on all of them
You are fantastic. I also got the ship fever starting from my trip in 1960 Pendennis castle to Southampton and return on the Africa… thank you so much
Great video and fantastic model building.
Wonderful story with fantastic videos. Thank ya.
That's really a very nice hobby you have and very detailed and good model ships. Thank you very much for sharing this clip very interested and well done for your beautiful work.
Wonderful. Seeing the Arundel-Castle was particularly interesting as my dad served on her.....lost to cancer last year, miss him terribly.
Good memories. Thank you
Absolutely fantastic!
Fantastic work! Thank you.
Congratulations! Very inspiring, thank you!
Hi there my father was in the RAF and I worked at Biggin Hill I grew up in Chelsfield and now live in Canada . I have a huge collection of vintage Airfix kits . Your channel is amazing ty .
Thank you so much for the video! I love model building as well. You're very talented. (Cheers).🚢
And there was I thinking you were only interested in overlanding in off-road vehicles Andrew. Your talents never cease to amaze!
Really nice you share your passion. The family footage is lovely .
Loved model building and still do it. Fond memories of getting Airfix kits In Rhodesia
Very enjoyable Andrew. Thanks.
Lots of resonance here. My grandparents travelled on Union Castle, and on the the Vaal. My bro + I collected Airfix models - Canberra, Q Eliz, Bismarck, Hood, Englsih Elec Lightning, VC10 - &c - when we lived in Dar-es-Salaam. We sailed on the Lloyd Triestino 'Asia' when my father took his home leave entitlement. En route we saw Chusan, Northern Star & Ocean Monarch, and we stopped to take aboard a stow-away from our sister ship 'Africa'. Happy days.
Wow, that is amazing…great story, fabulous models and very inspirational. Thanks for sharing….regards, Chrid
Don't know why UA-cam recommended this Video but watching your childhood pictures reminded me of my time as a child building warplane sets , I never got as far as to paint them though .Talking of warplanes a little story if anybody cares , before I built models I liked drawing them so one day at home doing my homework I got distracted and started drawing a dogfight between a Spitfire and a Messerschmitt of course the Messerschmitt was going down in flames . The next day im primary school my maths teacher was checking our homework and as I opened my excercise book I realized I had drawn the whole thing in my book I can't remember her facial expression but she was not pleased to say the least all I remember hearing her say was consequences and having a word with my class teacher . So when school ended that day and everybody in my class could go home I had to go and see my teacher .As I opened the door to my class he was sitting on a chair waiting for me he must have been in his 60s greyish hair with a matching mustache a little bit like Albert Einstein but better groomed , he was smiling and asked me to come closer I was so confused because I was expecting a beasting not a smile . As I sat on his lap he started explaining to me im a calm voice the bad things that had happened and that I shouldn't draw things in my exercise book especially warplanes with swastikas all over them as we are in Germany and it is not allowed to draw that symbol . Maybe I got off so lightly because I was a brit but I like to think that Mr.Wolf was simply a cool person and he would have been the same with a German child or maybe it was because he served in the Wehrmacht who knows .
I built that Helldiver kit! My family drove down to Harlingen, Texas to attend the Airsho '79, and the Confederate Air Force had the Helldiver on display and I fell in love with that plane. If I recall, it didn't fly but we were able to walk right up to it and they had assembled some elevated stairs and we were able to get up and have a look at the cockpits, front and rear. Being a little kid, that plane was enormous. I remember I bought an Airfix Helldiver model kit a short while later. Ha! The C-130 was another favorite of mine as well!
I thoroughly enjoyed your video and I agree, that it is far better than watching mindless television. I had stopped building models for close to 30 years and have recently gotten back into the hobby, with armor kits of all things. And you are correct, the quality of these kits from that of those from the 70s and 80s is magnitudes better.
Really impressive! Thank you for sharing the story of your modeling evolution. For sure a much better way to spend time than watching mindless TV.
Very inspiring to those of us who are at the beginning of the modelling hobby!
lovely i went on a cruise round the med with my mother and father when i was 10 years old on the raina del mar thats 48 years ago!
Wow, this is fascinating. Your great passion and dedication are very admirable. huge respect for you and beloved brother
The Arundel castle really was a beauty
A pleaure to watch. Thank you.
I am absolutely impressed by people absorbed by an activity that requires so much skill. And then know how to tell so many details.
Thanks Andrew,I really enjoyed this video.
Wow how amazing. I am a ship modeller myself. As a kid I built kits, until got married in 1974 and began on scratch build models in card. Won't go in detail as this vid explains a lot of the hobby.
my little brother and I had a similar childhood. we were obsessed with models. cars, jets, tanks, ships and planes. I got into it a bit more but this biography brought me back to my childhood, bigtime
Fascinating. We made the trip from Southampton to Cape Town on our way to Australia, on the Elenis.
Beautifull and very intresting thema of the inside of an hobby.
Just awesome, what a brilliant video
I really love the passion you share with the audience. Please don't stop
This was beautiful. I have recently got back into model kits in my adult life - partly for photography purposes, partly for the sheer fun of building something with my hands! Thanks for sharing this.
Well said 😊
I too enjoy building models for the purpose of of photographing them.
Me too !
I grew up in Durban and the Union - Castle liners were a daily feature of my life. Travelled on Windsor Castle twice. Love passenger liners and collect die cast 1:1250 models but wasn’t very successful at building them. Yours are superb! Would love to see them one day.
And the Canberra is superb. Thank you for this!