The word "maru" originated in the seventh century and has since come to
> serve as a popular name for a host of Japanese vessels. The first ship to
> use the suffix is said to have been the 16th century ship called the Nipon
> Maru, built by the legendary Toyotomi Hideyoschi. However, despite its
> widespread use, the word has never been graced with a definitive
Some time ago I built a large naval base for photographing waterline models, while the dockyard would remain the same, the different types of surface craft would come and go, the huge problem was of course space/room which I honestly don't have a great deal of, when I saw Jim Smith's work it reminded me of - certain models cry out for a diorama - again this raises a problem what to do with them.
With a multi functional diorama base to work from, I can photograph and store models easily, the 4 Maru's I have so far will all go into a diorama in the near future. We're not the same and obviously everyone has different ideas of what a diorama is, and should look like, my idea is basically a bit of everything, my HMS Echo is as small as I would build a diorama for a perm-base.
At the moment I have asked for help with ideas, advise, help you name it in building my next diorama multi base, this time, it will have a maximum of 7 inches wide with a length of 30 inches.
Many thanks for the replies.