Jules Vern's NAUTILUS

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rgmarine

New Member
Feb 17, 2012
17
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Fort Myers, Florida
After building plastic and wood ship models for many years I decided to try my hand at paper modeling. This model of the Nautilus as depicted in Disney's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" is my first attempt at paper and I added a lot of additional detail from parts that I cobbled from many places. Enjoyed building this so much that I ordered Taschen Titanic, Halinski Scharnhorst and many others. Now I just have to find time to build them.
118194d1329505653-nautilus-submarine-disney-style-013.jpg
 

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Amazing work,where did the Nautilus model come from and any chance of some more pictures please.
 
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The model is a Jon Leslie design, I believe. It is available at the is link:
(no commercial links allowed!)

For those who are interested, here is a little more info. The hatches were made from wood buttons with hinges made of paper and dowel pieces. The conning tower windows were made from dolls eyes bought in a craft store - cut out the back remove the "eye" and you are left with a nice clear dome shape (you can buy a bag of various sizes for a couple of bucks). The large side viewing windows were the most challenging. I finally got some inspiration when I bought some lightbulbs for the house in a blister pack. The shape was close but too small, so off I went to Home Depot to look at things in blister packs when, lo and behold, I found the perfect size and shape in a toilet bowl flapper valve (amazing the sources for modeling materials). Another interesting item is the spiral speed log. This I made from a piece of spiral macoroni. The original macoroni had two spirals so I cut one spiral off with a dremel tool. The prop shroud was made from PVC pipe. Other deck hardware came from kit pieces that I had lying around.

If you look through the windows you can see Captain Nemo and the interior of the grand salon. These came from ensmallments that I made from movie stills and glued them behind the windows.
 

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Great job in the construction of the Nautilus. I thought that the model was bit smaller than that. It looks like you enhanced and enlarge the model, which allows for better details. Enjoy and see you around the forum.
 
Wauw what a great moddel..
a few months back a did a walkthrough at disneyland paris...
i'm glad it's not a free model..because then i need to have a bigger todo list :)
she looks the same as the master replicas nautilus.
 
More on Nautilus

The model is 36 inches long and was made from 60lb cardstock reinforced wbalsa wood. After coating with clear matte finish it seems very sturdy and shows no signs of warping even in the humid climate we have here in Florida.

I must say that I really enjoy reading the info in this forum and have learned a lot from all those who have posted their experiences here.

Also I would like to thank you all for the kind words. They provide much need encouragement.

You can see on my workbench that there are several projects in various stages of completion. There is Nautilus, a Spanish galleon, and the hull of a revenue cutter.

Edges of the paper was colored with marker pens. Additional rivets were put on parts that I added with black markers. The finished model was coated with four coats of Testors satin finish clear coat (clear parts were masked during the final coats.

I'm working on a display stand for it. Found four nice nautilus shells at a shell store and was thinking of supporting the model between the four of them on a display base board.
 

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Nautilus

Great job on your Nautilus, F131. Wish I had read your file before I started mine. It could have saved me a lot of running around. Looks like we ended up with many of the same ideas in the end.
 
Ah ha! I thought I had seen a similar build before,thought I was going mad.Great builds by the both of you and a great looking submarine.
 
WOW! What an amazing job. Thank you for joining and sharing your work with us. Keep up the amazing work.

Dave
 
@rgmarine, You did a FANTASTIC job on this model. The extra added detail adds character and life to the model.

@F131, Thank you for sharing your build. You as well, did a FANTASTIC job on your build. I especially like how you went through the entire process of your build and what you used to enhance it.
 
Fantastic builds by the both of you !!

These are real examples of mastering the craft and showning what can be done with papermodeling.

The model itself is an icon and these two builds realy give it credit.

Thanks for sharing!

Cheers,
Elko
 
I think Harper Goff's Nautilus is one of the most (if not the most) elegantly designed SF crafts ever - I fell in love with it when I saw the movie when I was 9.
Outstanding job on this - a beautiful and lovely job!
 
I'm glad to see other's are building Jon's model. I really like your additions.:thumb:
Here is my version:


At $50 bucks, I hope it came printed!! This picture of your work area is awesome in itself, and the sailing ship behind it looks interesting. I had to remove the links.

This forum is focused on free models, not commercial models. That has been the rule here for many years. I amended that rule to allow anyone who posted a design or build thread, of their own, on the subject/model, to post a link at the end of the build. That is the only way commercial links can be posted. However, anyone with knowledge of surfing the web can easily find the source by reading the thread, or use the Private Messaging part of the forum to exchange information. If anyone has any questions about this please send me an email, do not post it in this thread. We have too many designers/websites offering their works for "Free" to justify someone selling of their wares here and contributing nothing, it is a disservice to those who understand what this forum is doing. Thanks. :)
 
DEAD THREAD!!!
 
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