I don't think SB-scale people were ever posted as "parts" or "official rendition". What You saw were just figures individually drawn by some Authors for their own use. ;P
Posts:3765 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:06 am
Contact:Website
Sharing images is not in violation of the fair use agreement at all. If you are the sole artist in the credit line, you can even provide waivers to the Fair Use Agreement if you wish.
I know that in SB scale 1 click is 15 cm (2 clicks are one foot), and in FD scale 22 pixels are 1 meter. But how can I convert SB and FD scales to the «normal» modelist scales (1:48 or 1:72)? Because I don't know the actual pixel length. Thanks a lot (with my appologies if the answer is obvious, or is explained in another topic). Cheers.
I'm not super familiar with how this works but Photoshop images are based on a "resolution" which is usually set in pixels per inch (when printed). This is normally 72 pixels per inch, and given this I assume you could do some math and end up with a basic method to display a printed-out drawing in the standard modeling scales.
Technical drawings that exist on a computer screen and plans that are printed out are two completely different animals, though, so I wouldn't even bother if I were you. Shipbucket is not meant to be viewed when printed out - it is first and foremost a pixel raster drawing format designed to be viewed on a computer or even (God help us) a phone or tablet screen.