Howdy Fellows,
I've been looking for pictures to help me better grasp proportions and aesthetics. I have found that the top notch muzzleloaders presented on auctions are a great resource to help understand the how one part affects another, how they balance, and generally speaking, where one part goes in relation to another!
So I found these 1760's German beauties:
Image Credit: Herman-Historica
Real beautiful aren't they?
But if you remove all the embellishments, they are basically just like every other longrifle or pistol. What I mean is that they're gun barrels on wood stocks! The key though is the lines that make them elegant and refined. (You could take a pine 2X8 and hack out a stock that would work, but I don't think it would ever make it to the sales floor on Sotherby's!)
I really like the look of the pistols though.
Image Credit: Herman-Historica.
So what I did, was copy the picture and pasted it on a Word document.
I found, that given one dimension, I could extrapolate all the others. My version of Word has a function that makes it easy to do so.
First left click on the picture. An outline with little boxes appears around the picture. A "
Picture Tools" bar appears up top also.
Click on the
Crop Tool, and using your mouse, crop the picture to clearly defined points using the known dimensions. In the case of these pistols, I knew they are 47 cm long. So I cropped from the tip of the muzzle to the back edge of the stock.
Now right click on the picture. A menu box appears. Click on the
Size and Position, and in the width box enter your dimension. 47cm = 18.5 inches.
Take note of the scale! In my case it is a 235% enlargement.
That's it fellows. Now you can crop whatever part you need, input the scale, and the picture is now actual size.
So using the example above, the pistols are 18.5 inches long. Therefore:
The barrel is 13.2 inches.
The height is 5 inches
The muzzle diameter is .75 inch
Every dimension can be measured (tediously) with this process. Of course programs like photoshop and the CAD ones make it even easier, but in less than twenty minutes, once I figured out the procedure I printed out and wrote the measurements on several pistols, all to life size.
One other note. Each individual picture is different! So you have to do the same process with each individual picture.
After it was all set and done, the hardest part for me was lining up the sheets and taping them together evenly. Those of you with access to large printers with the big paper are fortunate indeed! And if you have access to a plotter, you can do just about anything you want!
Of course this isn't
exact, I'm sure it is a little bit off, but it won't be by much. And if you are just looking for a pattern or an outline to copy, you can't go wrong!
I found that some photos where very difficult to work with because they were blurry or poor resolution. But even then, you get a better than general feel for the design.
Well,
I hope this is a helpful idea to those of you like me, that can't draw a straight line with a ruler!
Your friend,
Albert “
The Afghan” Rasch
The Rasch Outdoor Chronicles™ΜOΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ!