Patrick Davey Posted April 21 Posted April 21 You are hereby sentenced to creating more of these! 1 1
Kevin Sweeney Posted April 30 Author Posted April 30 Some photos from the opening of my exhibition in the County Museum on Saturday. I sold two models. 9
Kevin Sweeney Posted May 7 Author Posted May 7 A quick, simple project, started this morning and just finished. The Abbeyland Tower in Cavan Town is an iconic Cavan structure. It was the belfry of medieval Cavan abbey, and is the sole surviving fragment of medieval Cavan town. 13
Kevin Sweeney Posted May 13 Author Posted May 13 Another iconic Cavan building, Killykeen Cottage built in 1819 by Lady Farnham, on the shore of Lough Oughter. Anyone who has visited Killykeen Forest Park will recognise it. 7 2
derek Posted May 13 Posted May 13 5 hours ago, Kevin Sweeney said: Another iconic Cavan building, Killykeen Cottage built in 1819 by Lady Farnham, on the shore of Lough Oughter. Anyone who has visited Killykeen Forest Park will recognise it. Lovely model Kevin. Especially like the camber on the hips of the roof 1 1
Mol_PMB Posted May 13 Posted May 13 Superb work as ever! I keep forgetting how small these all are in N gauge, yet the character and detail is captured perfectly. 1 2
Kevin Sweeney Posted May 21 Author Posted May 21 (edited) Conjectural model of medieval Cavan Abbey, based on a late 1500s map of Cavan Town. The tower I posted on May 7th is all that remains of the abbey. This model will be joining my other models on display in the County Museum, until November 1st. I'm hunting for a commission from a glamping site, so I've made a glamping pod as a sample. I also have a new website, which is still a work in progress but is now live at breffnimodels.ie Edited May 21 by Kevin Sweeney 11
Patrick Davey Posted May 22 Posted May 22 More amazing work Kevin - love the contrast in the glamping pod! Great website too - best of luck with it all. 1 1
Kevin Sweeney Posted July 20 Author Posted July 20 I've taken a break from making models until September, but I'm doing a lot of research on our architectural heritage. I have come across many sad cases of beautiful buildings abandoned and allowed to crumble, and others modified beyond recognition. This one pictured take the prize for least sensitive reuse of a historically important building, I've come across so far. Built in the 1820s, this is the gate lodge of Baronstown House, Co Westmeath, converted into a very grand cow house. It's so awful and ugly I'm nearly tempted to make a model of it. 1 1 1
Kevin Sweeney Posted September 8 Author Posted September 8 After my summer break, the new model making season has begun. I spent the last few months doing a lot of research into Irish architectural heritage. My plan for this season is to work on another exhibition, which I hope to have ready by April. The working title is "The Irish House", so a range of buildings from a ring fort, to a modern mansion. My first build of the season is Ormond Castle in Carrick on Suir. A unique Irish building, the only Tudor manor house ever built in Ireland. Dating from the 1560s, it says something about the power and confidence of the Butlers of Ormond, that they built an unfortified manor house at a time when every body else was still building castles and forts. It's been as tricky model to build so far. The main part left to build is the ruined tower at the rear, which will be a new model making challenge for me. Also planned for this modelling season, is to get a double loop of track and some sidings laid, and get some trains running. I have a base board done so it would not take a lot of work to get trains running. The problem as always is getting distracted by buildings. 8 5
Patrick Davey Posted September 9 Posted September 9 Mighty Kevin! Great to see you back at the buildings again. I love how you never shy away from a challenging prototype! 1
Kevin Sweeney Posted September 9 Author Posted September 9 3 hours ago, Patrick Davey said: Mighty Kevin! Great to see you back at the buildings again. I love how you never shy away from a challenging prototype! As master modeller Kathy Millat once said if your not making mistakes your not learning. I like to keep pushing the limits in all aspects of life, you only live once. 3
Kevin Sweeney Posted September 14 Author Posted September 14 Almost there with Ormond Castle. Two chimney caps and ground cover on the base board and it's done. The real thing has the ruins of the original medieval castle behind it but I'm not modelling that. My next build will be Myrtle Grove in Youghal. Also a Tudor house, dating from the 1550s. Its most famous resident was Walter Raleigh who lived there from 1588 to 1589. Legend has it that the first potatoes in Ireland were planted in the garden. It is privately owned and still a family home. A remarkable survivor, 475 years old and still standing. 11
Kevin Sweeney Posted Monday at 16:05 Author Posted Monday at 16:05 Making good progress with Myrtle Grove. Have also started work on King House in Boyle. I started with a card mock-up, and have now completed all the windows and the carcass for the main block. Also have two models I made last June, one of a thatched cottage and the other a modern house. I have four models complete and one close to complete for my next exhibition. 8 1
Flying Snail Posted Monday at 17:14 Posted Monday at 17:14 These are all really impressive ... but it's the little cottage that caught my eye, I really like the thatched roof! 1 1
Kevin Sweeney Posted Monday at 17:32 Author Posted Monday at 17:32 (edited) 44 minutes ago, Flying Snail said: These are all really impressive ... but it's the little cottage that caught my eye, I really like the thatched roof! The thatched roof is cotton wool impregnated with PVA and acrylic paint, and pressed between two panes of glass. It works well at 2 mm scale, but I'm not sure how it would look in 4 mm scale. Edited Monday at 17:59 by Kevin Sweeney 4
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