Beautiful work as always Olha. Interesting fact: Vikings did not use the term ‘rudder’. They referred to it as the ‘steering board’, which comes down to us as ‘starboard’, meaning the right side of the ship. Interesting because the ‘steering board’ was always attached to the right side of Viking ships - I have no idea why this is the case. It would be interesting too, to know whether there was some advantage to the placement…
Yes. I wondered whether the placement might give a right-handed person some kind of mechanical advantage, but couldn’t visualise how that might show itself… Thanks for the comment.
One theory ,not exclusive to the Norse ,is that the steering board side was kept away from the dock side of the boat. The older name for the port side being larboard coming from loading board or modern gangway.
The mast step in original norøna (viking language) was called "kærlingen" (loved one). So: the place i put my "mast"! The rest is up to your imagination😉
El fabricante cerró la producción de este set. En su lugar, creó la llamada versión "Actualizada", que se convirtió absolutamente 100% en un juguete, que no tiene nada que ver con el barco original...
Great job and good model! Thank for publishing it!
Thank you!
Glad you like it!
Here comes......
ANOTHER OUTSTANDING presentation.
I am amazed at how many builds you have going. Nice work Olha.
Thank you!
Model table saws ought come with dado blades.
Wow! A great deal of work for such a relatively small part. The end result is a true work of art. Thanks Olha for yet another captivating video.
Thank you!
Love the 'Ole Timey Zydaco music.
Amazing work! 👍😎
Such a gorgeous kit and with clean lines.
Thank you!
great video Olha, Thank you !
My pleasure
Good morning from Quebec, Canada,
Amazing!!!!!💖
Good morning from Peachtree city GA
Beautiful work as always Olha. Interesting fact: Vikings did not use the term ‘rudder’. They referred to it as the ‘steering board’, which comes down to us as ‘starboard’, meaning the right side of the ship. Interesting because the ‘steering board’ was always attached to the right side of Viking ships - I have no idea why this is the case. It would be interesting too, to know whether there was some advantage to the placement…
i suppose most people are right handed.
Yes. I wondered whether the placement might give a right-handed person some kind of mechanical advantage, but couldn’t visualise how that might show itself… Thanks for the comment.
One theory ,not exclusive to the Norse ,is that the steering board side was kept away from the dock side of the boat. The older name for the port side being larboard coming from loading board or modern gangway.
Never thought it could be related to the right hand - but it makes sense...
@@OlhaBatchvarovleft hand always a horn of ale?
Olha excelentes son tus trabajos Navales, felicidades....🇲🇽🇲🇽....
Gracias
As always a joy to watch. Do you plan to paint/stain the ship? If so - do you not paint the rudder before attaching it to the ship?
When I glue everything on the model - I will use oils. I haven't decided which ones yet - I'll make a few samples first...
Fantastic 😮😮🥰🥰👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thanks 🤗
I've often wondered at what scale ought a person ought model axe & adze marks on timbers. I have no answer.
😂😂
Maybe this is the right scale for this))))
Wow, that is once again an outstanding work you did there Olha :o Always impressed by your skills and attention to detail, this is just amazing !!
Thank you very much!
Unbelievable
The mast step in original norøna (viking language) was called "kærlingen" (loved one). So: the place i put my "mast"! The rest is up to your imagination😉
Thank you for the information))))
👏👏👏
me puedes dar un link para poder pedir este modelo de forma segura muchas gracias
El fabricante cerró la producción de este set. En su lugar, creó la llamada versión "Actualizada", que se convirtió absolutamente 100% en un juguete, que no tiene nada que ver con el barco original...
👍👍👍👍👍😍😺
👏💖👍💕🎁