Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Aircraft Carrier for the Quatar Museum Authority

Last April the Artist Khalil Rabah Commissioned Masterpiece Models to fabricate an 11' long version of a Nimitz Class aircraft Carrier. His vision was to turn an aircraft carrier into a farm that produces Strawberry's and tomatoes representing his country's farming plight. It was an interesting project that brought several interpretative and cultural obstacles that had be solved.
At masterpiece Models we were able to bridge the language barrier and provide the customer with the realization of his artistic vision.


According to the Palestinian Museum of Natural History
"Model of a military aircraft carrier transformed into a farm and factory for tomato-paste and strawberry jam. The shape of the carrier resembles that of the Gaza strip, where restrictions apply to the export of local-grown tomatoes and strawberries. A huge oil painting depicting an advertisement for this ship-turned-factory hangs in the background. On supermarket shelves, jam-jars and tomato-paste cans are on display for the viewer to take"

This model took approximately 90 working days to build out of formed styrene plastic and cast resin. Our creative team was able to create this masterpiece within the budget and timeline set forth by the client.








Wednesday, February 8, 2012

International space Station for the Kansas Cosmosphere

in Early 2011 we were contracted by the Kansas cosmosphere to fabricate a 1/48th scale replica of the International space Station this was an interesting build due to the fact the Space Station is ever changing. The final model was almost 9' across it now hangs proudly in their Museum.







Wednesday, October 19, 2011

That Freedom Might Live New introductory price



THAT FREEDOM MIGHT LIVE

To Honor those Heroes that have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country
and our freedom, Masterpiece Models presents the Soldiers Cross. A portion of each sale will be donated to one of the following organizations of your choice. Please specify your charity of choice at check out. Intrepid Fallen heroes Fund, Fisher House Foundation, Wounded Warriors, Disabled American Veterans.

You can order at this link THAT FREEDOM MIGHT LIVE


Thursday, September 1, 2011

New Mini Castle for the National Park Service

Our friends at Formations asked Masterpiece Models to create a scale replica of Castle Williams as it looked when it was completed in 1811. This is for a larger exhibit at the Governors Island national Park. The model was created using historical data and images of the fort as it looks today. Since the model was largely round our team was able to make sections of which were sent to our Casting Department to be cast out of a urethane resin. This model will be sitting outside for most of the summer months and will be be tactile, so it had to be made to take abuse from the sun and people. Overall this project came out beautifully and our customer is very pleased with the outcome. We would like to give special thanks to Rick Lawler, Ric Keen and Bruce Bowman for their craftsmanship on this project, and of course our casting team that spent hours and hours casting up the parts of this magnificent replica.

Castle Williams Governors Island National Park






Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Sustainable Energy House for Clackamas County

Michael Piper of Clackamas County Asked Masterpiece Models to create a replica of an energy efficient home. This model depicts a Home built in the 1970's and a home built today showing the comparisons of how framing and insulation has advanced in the last 40 years. This model was completed in 30 working days by our team lead by Rick lawler.








Monday, July 25, 2011

New Lenses for the Lotus 11

Our Friend Peter G, recently tasked us to create two new custom fit headlight lenses for his historic 1956 Lotus 11 race car. His fantastic restoration only needed one last touch the headlight covers, he went to several other shops and had disappointing results. Once he came to see us
he knew that he found the right shop to complete this task.






Look at that smile

We have expanded our services now to offer tail lights, trim parts using our poly composite cast metal that can be triple nickel chromed for that look and feel that you cannot tell the difference from an original to our parts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Here is a fun article that our local newspaper The Columbian recently did on us



John Geigle, CEO of Masterpiece Models, and Ed Warmack, a fabricator at the company who helped build the space toilet, stand next to a full-size replica space shuttle toilet created for a museum in Kansas. The museum says the No. 1 (so to speak) question they get is about going to the bathroom in space.

Friday, July 8, 2011


John Geigle’s model shop has produced a full-size replica of a space shuttle toilet for a museum in Kansas.

Did you know ?

The command module of problem-plagued Apollo 13 was disassembled after its 1970 flight and its parts shipped to museums, manufacturers and space centers across the world. Years later, the Kansas Cosmosphere retrieved its 80,000 missing parts and restored the spacecraft to its original post-flight condition.

Some of the Kansas Cosmosphere’s artifacts are on display less than 50 miles from Vancouver, on loan to the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Ore.

On the Web:

NASA video shows how astronauts learn about zero gravity toilets.

OK, let’s just get it out of the way and then move on. The latest museum piece from John Geigle’s fabrication shop is a tribute to those who boldly go where no man has gone before.

It’s a space toilet.

To be more precise, it’s a replica of a toilet on a NASA space shuttle. Geigle’s team at Masterpiece Models built the shuttle fixture for a repeat customer, the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center.

A few years ago, the shop just east of Hazel Dell built a full-scale replica of a Mars rover for the museum.

“This time, the request was a little bit strange,” acknowledged Chris Orwoll, president of the Cosmosphere.

His museum in Hutchinson, Kan., boasts an all-star collection of space artifacts, including the original Apollo 13 — “Houston, we have a problem” — command module.

It is one of only three museums in the world to display spacecraft flown during America’s Mercury, Gemini and Apollo manned space programs.

But it’s looking to supplement its impressive roster of hardware with displays that represent the human aspects of space flight.

“We have a lot of artifacts,” said collections manager Meredith Miller, and information-dense interpretive panels that provide lots of reading material.

Part of the reason for Geigle’s assignment “was to create more interactivity” for a shuttle gallery scheduled to open in August, Miller said.

Geigle’s fabrication crew also created a 1/48th scale model of the International Space Station — about 8 feet long — that will hang in the Cosmosphere’s space shuttle gallery.

The toilet mock-up will help the Kansas museum answer a frequently asked question.

“How do astronauts eat, and how do they go to the bathroom? Those are two of the biggest questions,” Miller said.

The toilet replica isn’t just a three-dimensional display. Museum visitors will be able to climb into the driver’s seat, so to speak, providing some of the interactivity Miller was talking about.

The replica, built by Masterpiece Models fabricator Ed Warmack, can handle a 300-pounder, Geigle said.

Weight isn’t much of a factor for a fixture operating in zero gravity. But zero gravity also means a person who sits down doesn’t stay down long; that’s why the space toilet has spring-loaded restraints that clamp down on your thighs, preventing the user from floating away.

That’s not the only design difference. The shuttle toilet’s opening is only four inches; the user has to be pretty precise.

“In space, it’s crucial that everything aligns,” Orwoll said.

Astronauts practice “docking” with a training unit that includes video monitoring.

And here’s an opportunity — thanks to The Columbian’s archives — for a local astronaut to describe the experience of toilet-training, shuttle style.

“They actually have a camera under you, with cross hairs,” Camas astronaut Mike Barratt said a few years ago during a hometown visit. “You have to practice while watching a video screen.”

And the NASA career of another local astronaut hinged on that “How do you …?” question.

Former Hudson’s Bay High School teacher Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger has retold the story a couple of times.

“When I was teaching astronomy at high school, one of my students said, ‘How do you go to the bathroom in space?’ I looked it up that night, and at the same time, they had posted that educators could become astronauts,” according to Columbian files.

“So, I had the answer to my student’s question, but I also got an answer to a dream that I had for a long time, and so I applied for the astronaut position,” Metcalf-Lindenburger said.

While the Vancouver-made version is strictly for display purposes, the real fixture uses suction to move waste through the system.

According to a NASA Web page for frequently asked questions, “Solid wastes are compressed and stored onboard, and then removed after landing. Wastewater is vented to space, although future systems may recycle it, such as they do on the International Space Station. The air is filtered to remove odor and bacteria and then returned to the cabin.”

A NASA video that explains the system will be part of the shuttle toilet display.

“It’s much more sophisticated than the Apollo capsule,” Miller said. Today’s astronauts “don’t have to wear those diapers.”


The photos below are by Rick Lawler