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Sunday, 14 June 2026

Captain Caveman Gets His Coat

 Season 10, Episode 4

With the Teen Angels safely recruited and apparently intent upon solving mysteries through the vigorous application of firearms, it was time to return to the small matter of Captain Caveman himself; more specifically, it was time to confront the issue of the hair.  My original plan had centred around the Saintly Mrs. Awdry's cake decorating tool, a device which had already shown considerable promise when pressed into service for purposes entirely outside its intended remit. The difficulty, however, was finding a suitable material to force through it.

The elderly Milliput used during the proof of concept stage had proven rather too crumbly, so I turned instead to Green Stuff, that ubiquitous modelling putty found lurking in hobby rooms throughout the land. If it could be sculpted, reasoned I, surely it could be persuaded through the decorating tool; best beloved, it could not. There followed a frantic period of archaeological excavation as I attempted to remove rapidly curing putty from the Saintly Mrs. Awdry's cake decorating implement before awkward questions could be asked. Whilst I cannot claim the operation was entirely successful, I am pleased to report that diplomatic relations between the Kitchen and Hobby Room remain intact.

Fortunately, disaster was narrowly averted and the decorating tool survived to fight another day; my dignity, however, was less fortunate.  Admitting temporary defeat, I invested in some superfine white Milliput and turned my attention to another pressing problem, the cloak.  Unlike the hair, which merely covered approximately ninety eight percent of Cavey's anatomy, the cloak represented something of a mystery. Tin foil was briefly considered, as was card, before my attention settled upon an old blister pack lurking in the pile of shame.  The inhabitants were duly evicted then a little cutting, some cautious heating with a Zippo lighter and...

Well the first attempts filled Awdry Towers with enough acrid black smoke to suggest a papal election was underway.  Eventually, however, I discovered a happy medium whereby the softened plastic could be persuaded into convincing folds before rapidly cooling and retaining its shape. Better still, it would remain lightweight and flexible whilst avoiding some of the fragility associated with thin metal.  For once, a plan appeared to be working.

The cloak was carefully trimmed, repeatedly offered up to the model and adjusted until the fit seemed right. The trick, I realised, would be layering a foundation layer of hair first, then the cloak, before finally burying the joins beneath yet more hair to create the illusion that everything emerged naturally from Cavey's luxuriant pelt.

With the club attached and the remaining wire concealed beneath putty, only one final detail remained, the whiskers.  These wonderfully unruly appendages seem to possess a life entirely of their own in the original cartoons and so fine wire was drilled directly into the shell and secured with superglue. Once in place, they immediately transformed the miniature.  Quite suddenly, Cavey was no longer a collection of experimental components.

He was Captain CAAAAAAAVE MAAAAAANNNNN!



30 comments:

  1. I am simply amazed at the transformation taking place and the ingenuity that is getting you there. Despite evolutionary dead ends life emerges from the primordial gloop. Great stuff.
    Stephen

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    1. Thank you Stephen, I have certainly enjoyed the process so far even with the set backs. Tell me, do you have a Blog?

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    2. Thanks, Michael, for asking. Although I keep a record which I call 'my very own blog', it just sits on my computer. So the answer is, 'sorry, no, I don't have a blog'.
      Where I do share hobby news is with "The Virtual Wargames Club" founded by Phil Olley during Covid lockdown. It's uses Zoom. This meets weekly on Saturdays from 16.30-18.00 [U.K. time] and is an international group. All wargamers are welcome. It's very relaxed and members come when they can. As well as wargame chat and some awful puns we share photos of our wargame projects, museum visits, battlefield tours photos etc. If anyone is interested in giving it a look they can email me [stephen.f.caddy@gmail.com]. I can then send them a link to the next one. All we ask of new members is that they tell us something of how they got into the hobby and what their current project is, no one has to do this, but most wargamers are only too happy to chat about their obsession, and this is a 'safe space' in which to be as obsessed as you like.
      Sorry if that's a long winded way to say 'no' in answer to your initial question.
      Stephen

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    3. Thank you Stephen and what a thoroughly good idea. I have found lately that balancing home life with working away from home and the blog quite difficult. The blog was the obvious casualty but I did miss the interaction with like minded chums. As the end of the academic year looms into sight, I promised myself that I would try and be a bit more of a presence over the summer holidays but it strikes me that your approach encapsulates the best of all ideals. It might not work for me at the moment, but it is lovely to know that something like this exists if my circumstances were to change.

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  2. Excellent work on the construction Michael, you have created a great representation with lots of character and detail, look forward to seeing it in paint.
    When it comes to tools and putty, they don't mix ! LOL Good to hear relations between the kitchen and hobby room are still on speaking terms.

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    1. Thank you so much Dave. It has certainly been a steep learning curve. As for the paint, I am hoping that isn't going to take too long.

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  3. Love it love it love it! You've done an amazing job Michael and I'm everso excited to see this little guy painted up! Great post that had me chuckling here in Court.

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    1. Thank you so much Dai. I was really pleased with how the build developed and so slapped some paint on him the other day. I can now see that the eyes are a bit underwhelming and so feeling that I might need to revisit this in some way.

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  4. Well that came out great in the end, as you say the unruly wire hire really sells the finished figure. Top stuff!
    Cheers Roger

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    1. Thank you so much Roger. I was absolutely thrilled with the build, but the undercoat has highlighted a couple of areas I might try and revisit.

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  5. This is quite the clever bit of modelling mate!

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    1. Thank you my good man. It all came together rather better than I imagined.

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  6. Great work Michael he is coming along nicely 👍

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  7. Just splendid work, Michael, simply splendid. Top stuff, Sir.

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    1. Thank you so much Simon. It has been such a blast putting this together.

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  8. I'm a bit behind on both my Forgotten Hero and actually commenting on others, so apologies for that. However having peruse all posts on this project so far, all I can say is bravo, sir! Not only has our hirsute hero revealed himself, but your interpretation of the Teen Angels is also splendid. Obviously, you're going to have to do the Funky Phantom at some point...

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    1. Absolutely no problem Jez, always lovely to see you around here. Thank you so much for the kind comments. I tried to paint him the other day and it revealed one or two areas that I have to decide if I want to revisit, most notable the eyes.

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  9. Splendid work and looking spiffing in grey primer!
    Best Iain

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    1. Thank you Iain. I have a done some painting since this post, but not entirely convinced that I don't need to revisit some aspects of the facial features.

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  10. Amazing creativity and use of unconventional materials! I have a hard enough time using Green Stuff. Lol!

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    1. Thank you Dean. It has certainly been a steep learning curve.

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  11. Great result . That has all worked well

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    1. Thank you Dave, it has certainly been fun to do.

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