A trip to the hobby shop, Part 1

When I was a kid, we went to the hobby shop exactly once a year.  The purpose of the trip was to buy one of those paper mats with fake grass on them, so we could wrap a 4X8 sheet of plywood for the requisite electric train under the Christmas Tree.  There was a shop about 30 minutes from the house–the now defunct Universal Hobbies on State Road 7 and Broward Boulevard–so we went there and spent maybe 10 minutes from the time we opened the door until the transaction was completed.

Fast forward to about 1981.  I was in my full-on "serious" modeler mode, having recently discovered modeling magazines in whose articles the authors discussed such exotic materials such as putty, airbrushes, and decal solvents.  Well, the K-Mart didn't have any of that stuff, so I'd beg a ride to the hobby shop.  They had some of the stuff I was looking for, but none of the kits I wanted.  My mother mentioned that she worked around the corner from another hobby shop, but it was further away from the house.  I just got my ticket to drive, so I took a trip one summer day.  It wasn't too much further from the house, and had lots of stuff packed into a little space.  I had discovered Warrick Custom Hobbies in the Twin Oaks Center on Davie Boulevard, and it wasn't too long before I became a regular.

Remember the stash I wrote about a week ago?  Well, the roots of that stash go back to 1982 and Warrick Custom Hobbies.  Looking through the stacks in search of an Otaki 1/48 F4U Corsair kit–a kit that was, at the time, my Holy Grail–I noted another oddity.  It was a Life-Like kit in my favored 1/48 scale of the Gloster Gladiator.  Asking around, I discovered it was initially released by a company called Inpact some years before.  It was fairly cheap (maybe $3 by the time the Governor got his cut), so I bought it.  Once home, I quickly botched the build, so I went back and bought a second–the only one left on the shelf.  That kit was stashed in my desk drawer, waiting for the time when my skills were such that I could do the kit justice.  I still have the kit, and my skills are certainly developed enough to do a nice job–but in the meantime, another company has released a better, more modern kit of the same airplane.  To be sure, I will keep the Life-Like kit, if for nothing more than nostalgia purposes.  I may even build it–the fact that it was old enough to vote when I first bought it belies the fact that it exhibits a good amount of fidelity to the original, it just needs some of the now-expected fine details not present in kits from the day. 

Oh, and that Corsair?  I found one a few weeks later, built it, botched the paint job beyone salvage, and went to the shop and bought a second.  That one got completed to my satisfaction and remained in my collection for a good many years, until it got broken during a move.  Of course, since then we've seen much newer and much nicer kits arrive on the scene, much like the Gladiator kit.

Once I went to college, I couldn't frequent the shop as often as I did during that summer.  I would, though, visit on those weekends when I travelled home, and I would usually find something to purchase.  Some, I would build during that semester in school, others would join the Gladiator in the desk drawer.  Being on the six-year plan (two studying Aero Engineering and four with Aero Studies with an Avionics concentration) meant that I may have visited the shop five or six times a year, maybe a few more if I had a summer break.  That would change once I graduated and moved back to Ft. Lauderdale.

I'll tell you more of the story later.  Until then, be good to one another.  I bid you peace.