12 pounder

captfue

Cadet
Joined
Mar 9, 2022
Here are a few pictures of a 1/24th 12 pounder I've been working on for a year or two. The first picture is the raw cannon made from hobby sticks, match sticks, and copper wire.

DSC00541.jpg

The painted cannon, still needs a bit of touchup painting.


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Here is a picture of most of the crew. Very early in the build. They still need lots of work before painting. I made them from old scrapes of plastic, such as model kit sprures , plastic flat ware, disposable razors, almost anything plastic. I have two ideas for the setting. One is having them looking at their officer giving instructions or posing for a picture.
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05.jpg
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I think that what you've done is simply outstanding. I like that everything is handmade; no purchased pieces. It shows a tremendous amount of talent.
I also like the casual posture of the crewman. If there was someone taking their picture, then that tells a story anyone could comprehend. If someone was giving them instructions, then that would require more information for the observer to figure out what was happening.

Please continue in showing us pictures of your progress.
 
Amazing detail work and very unique. Wouldn't mind knowing the process of how you construct the figures .
Looking forward to seeing more pics of your progress.

Here is a link to an SBS
 
Are these union or Confederate ? A/c models makes a similar set in 1/24th depicting the Washington artillery (Confederate) . Great job all around . Looking forward to your progress .
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Here is a link to an SBS
Excellent Step by step, many thanks for posting.
Looking forward to seeing more of your posts.
 
Here is a 1/6 model I built the carriage for - wheels came from Ebay
They look flat---cut out of one plank.

Here is my wheel that comes from a model that some National battlefield parks would sale. This is after I painted it and weathered it. The only modification that I made was to file the rim flat to remove the crown and add the bolt between every other spoke.
It was the right scale for a 3-foot {Edited to correct}diameter wheel that you would find on a mountain howitzer carriage.

Wheel.JPG
 
Last edited:
They look flat---cut out of one plank.

Here is my wheel that comes from a model that some National battlefield parks would sale. This is after I painted it and weathered it. The only modification that I made was to file the rim flat to remove the crown and add the bolt between every other spoke.
It was the right scale for a 4-foot diameter wheel that you would find on a mountain howitzer carriage.

View attachment 466610
Nice weathering. They look well used.
 

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