Thanks guys, Rick, do you know something the rest of us don't...?

Ben, I'm actually using silver calligraphy ink and a crowquill dip pen... if I get the sworls dialed in to the point where I'm happy with them I'll do a post on the technique. And absolutely, Nigel, the grunge is one of the things that drew me to the Eindecker (or Eendekker) in the first place...
Anyway, I took part of today and kept at the E.I, she's finally up on all three legs now (or ten, if you count all the struts):

The undercarriage was festooned with a spiderweb of pre-rigging, which will get tightened and touched up after everything gets glued in place (it's just press-fit into the fuselage now, one of the joys of modeling the Wingnut way):
And finally, there are many joys associated with having children, but one of the coolest, I'm finding, is when they rediscover WWI aircraft modeling thirty years on and start giving you awesome stuff:

The Xuron photo-etch shears were a random gift from my son Curt, who's finishing up his own 1:72 E.III tonight. Eindecker madness (
Eindecker Wahnsinn?) is contagious, it seems. Or as Nigel observed, the family who builds Fokkers together, stays together...
Dutch