![MODEL CHILD: Cootamundra's Taylum Chamberlain, 11, shows off the 'Harry Hill' ship model he entered into the Border Scale Modellers exhibition. Picture: MARK JESSER MODEL CHILD: Cootamundra's Taylum Chamberlain, 11, shows off the 'Harry Hill' ship model he entered into the Border Scale Modellers exhibition. Picture: MARK JESSER](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/LwkzkiYFFun7N3tMSiAzVf/bbd48108-cc88-4208-bd49-9c0ff18d7f3d.jpg/r0_252_4928_3253_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
MODEL CHILD: Cootamundra's Taylum Chamberlain, 11, shows off the 'Harry Hill' ship model he entered into the Border Scale Modellers exhibition. Picture: MARK JESSER
MODELS are three-dimensional canvases according to Border Scale Modellers president Kelly Knott.
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And he believes it is an art form that everybody should embrace.
More than 200 models including cars, ships, trucks and even dinosaurs, attracted a crowd of hundreds over the weekend to the annual scale model exhibition and competition on the Border.
The junior category was the largest with 45 entries.
Scaled models at the Border Scale Modellers annual exhibition