Bf-109F-4 of Gruenherzgeschwader, belly landed at Eastern Front in 1942 – 1/144 scale Vignette

Author:
Born and raised in an artistic household, I can’t remember a time in my life when I wasn’t creating, crafting or drawing. A small, but very well equipped, plastic aircraft scalemodel shop in my small hometown was the reason I got in touch with the hobby when I was about eight years old. It would become the place to spend my pocket money for the next eight years.
From my grandfather, who was a child in WWII, and my grandmother, who gave birth to her first child in 1945, I heard stories from the war time, to which I listened most attentively. My childish mind could not comprehend, that such a bad episode of history could have taken place right where I lived, and where my grandmother had lived back then. So at around ten years old I started to study every book about the war I could find. I wanted to understand what had happened.
My interest in WWII history, my love for the beauty of the aircrafts from that period, plus my constant will to create and to craft led me to focus on WWII aircraft scale modelling very early.
I spent my 20s self educating, starting a freelance career and starting a family. Seldomely thinking about the passion I once had. When covid first hit, and we found ourselves locked down in our flat, I first realised that I had made all my hobbies a business (which now was completely shut down). I was sitting there, anxiety gaining controle of me more and more, and for the first time in years I felt the need to do something just for myself. Something no customer would wait for, something without a deadline, something nobody would care about.
That’s when step by step I reconquered the scale modelling I once had spent a serious part of my childhood with. I never was into big scales, and indeed I had built 144th scale before, but it was then that I completely focused on that scale. It’s the perfect scale. And I will tell you why I am so strongly convinced of it:
The community around this scale is so welcoming, warm and supportive, that it took no time for me to have friends all around the world. Friends I share works and thoughts with, friends to inspire and who inspire me. A dimension of the hobby I never experienced in my childhood days, nor did I expect it in 2020.
I created this website and the small scale history project, because I was searching for a place that didn’t seem to exist on the internet. A place that focuses on historical and aircraft interest the same way it concentrates on scale modelling and aesthetics.
This is my project devoted to small scale modelling and history which I hope to grow to a place of inspiration, beauty, passion and historical awareness. I hope you’re with us on that journey.
Cheers,
Benedikt
hello@small-scale-history.com

Bf-109F-4 of Gruenherzgeschwader, belly landed at Eastern Front in 1942 – 1/144 scale Vignette

September 1944, Fano, Italy: the ground crew of No 601 Sqn maintaining and reloading their Spitfires – 1/144 Vignette

October 1943: Pilot Lieut. J. R. Brownstein ditched „Fox 5“ of VC-13 aboard of USS Core into the North Atlantic Ocean – 1/144 scale vignette

Saipan, 1944: Ground personell of 19th Fighter Squadron, 318th Fighter Group, 7th Air Force during gun harmonisation prozess on Republic P-47D-15-RA Thunderbolt 42-23289 “Lady Ruth” – 1/144 scale vignette

November 1943: The USS Saratoga, together with the USS Princeton, attacks the city of Rabaul, an important stronghold of the IJN forces, several times – 1/144 scale Models

USAAF pilot Maj. Garth Jared inspects his Supermarine Spitfire Mk. IXc “Eleonor” at Anzio, Italy, late January 1944 – 1/144 scale vignette

March 1945: two Corsairs of USS Shangri-la – 1/144 scale models