Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Making a test Snow Scene/frozen pond

There is a bunch to do here.

1. Making a pine tree - I used the wire, rope, and straw method (as in a different post here).
2. making a landscape with a foam base and plaster over the top and formed to the final shape.
3. Making believable snow on the trees, in drifts, and on the ground
4. making ice to look real.
5. sidewalk options (mainly for coloration purposes)

So first thing is the foundation - I did a little shaping of the foam, but not too much.  Mainly getting a slight depression for the iced over pond.  Once that was ready I covered the foam with plaster of paris.  much more shaping now, this was quite dusty so if you can do this not in an enclosed area I would suggest it.

After getting the pond the way I like, I added a sidewalk flat run using a popsicle stick.  Next step is to work on the pond.  First try was pearl white glass glazing.  Issue I had was it was not thin enough to flatten out.  Magic water was super in flattening out but was clear (unrealistic for anyone in the northern climes can testify to).  Coat 3 I mixed the glazing into the magic water.  This was acceptable, but I will work on it more prior to implementing in my layout.

Next was the snow.  I got the snow bottle (very small white glass beads) from the local model store.  I do recommend a breathing mask for these as it would be pretty easy to inhale these beads.  At the local big box store I got a small can of thicker white latex primer.  I covered the snow areas with the latex and sprinkled the paint with the snow beads.  This added a nice sparkle that snow has.
Next step was to setup the sidewalks.  I decided to go with a dark walk as to add contrast to the all white of the snow.  I used patching concrete that feathers out to a thin layer.  I slowly applied the thinned concrete being careful to not get into the snow.
Next I set in the 2 trees I made bracketing the pond.  Long term if I was doing this on a layout I would also be setting in limp poles to light the walk for evening strolls.
I took the white primer and mixed the beads in 50/50 (what I got from research).  This made a nice paste type fluid that was just thick enough to mold a little without forming sharp peaks.  I smoothed out several drifts and proceeded to drip the snow on the trees to get the snowed on look.  In the future I think I would start with a thinner mix for the trees and move my way up to the 50/50.

Finally I added some people and took the pic.  Not fully happy with the results, but this gives me enough  information to help when I do this on the layout.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Creating out of cheap stuff - The chain link fence

In doing research I saw a bit of information I wanted to try.  A how to make a good looking chain link fence.

I got 1/16" polystyrene rods (I know not scale but anything smaller would be real tough to work with first go) for the fence posts and rails.  I went down to the local river area and gathered small rounded rocks of varying sizes 1/4" to 1/2" and I made a run down to the local Michaels to buy a childs wedding veil and a can of aluminum colored spray paint.

I already had a hardwood tree made and the needed ground cover for a small grass hill.

I first grabbed a block of Styrofoam for the test, about a 6"x6" was super.  I wanted to have a hill and a reason for the fence so I wanted to have a rock retaining wall with either a future creek, road, or rail line would run.
I mixed the plaster up and created a mound with a sharp drop off of about 1" to the front.
Once set I drilled holes the size of the pipes about 8' in scale apart.  I cut off the vertical posts and smoothed the cut ends putting in a slight depression to help hold the horizontal pole.  They were glued into the holes to be about 1" above the plaster.  I slowly glued the horizontal pole in place one post at a time.

Once set it was time to paint the poles and initial brown of the ground.

Next step I did was the retaining wall.  I slowly stacked rocks until I got the look and feel I was looking for.  Once all was in place white glue (full strength) was poured behind the rocks a little at a time until the whole wall was secure.  Another glue would have probably worked better but it was late and I was not looking to go shopping.

I followed standard grass laying techniques with the color and styles of green ground foam.  I then cut a strip of wedding veil just slightly wider than the fence was tall.  Just a little as I would match it up at the top and could add taller grass/bushes at the bottom if the fence did not make it all the way down.
I did a quick spray of the aluminum color to the veil and attached after the paint was quite dry.  Standard styrene glue worked super for this as it did for the rails.
I added a few touches and shot the pics - Couple trees, park bench, and man sitting on the wall.  I added some taller shoots of grass in the rocks and a couple weeds.  For a real layout I would work more on the appearance of the wall by finding one similar and shoot some pics to compare to.

If you look closely at the above pic you can see the fence and it looks fairly real.  Not to bad for a quick evening slam it together to see how ti looks thing.

FYI - I took the shots on my kitchen island.  The overhead lights actually added a nice touch of what looks like the suns shadow under the tree.  Sometimes it is better to be lucky than good......




Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Benchworks basics - Rail line foundations

Now that we had the basic supports for the landscaping in place and a rough draft of location of the loops we can start putting down the foundation to lay the rail onto.

We started with the standard 1/4" plywood cut in strips about 4" wide.  We attached these to the supports giving a reasonable bed to build upon.  On top of the plywood was laid hemosote cut in strips about the same width.  FYI this is old school way that my co-builder grew up with.  Since we are now both over 50 that is quite old at that.

Steve researched a bit and discovered a method that is far more sturdy and has less waste, we all like that.  Basically making a 7 layer thick plywood using hardboard.  This does take LOTS of wood glue, so a good foam roller will help lots here.  Also you will be clamping the strips every few inches so a large bunch of spring clamps will be needed.  I will have to explain a bit and I hope the pics will do it justice.

We  bought a sheet of 1/8" thick hardboard and cut it into 3/4" wide strips about 4' long.  While this made LOTS of dark brown saw dust (which I am looking for a way to use), it made an easy to carry and store stack of material.    Basically we set a 1.5"-2" wide T attached to the landscape braces setting the top of the T about 1" under where we wanted the final track height to be.  Once a run of these braces were set, looking like a set of bridge trusses without the bridge, we started setting the hard board down.  This was done a few strips at a time making sure the strips do not end any where near each other (this adds lots of strength).

Glue up one side of a strip and apply it to the side of another.

A few of the good reasons to go with this type of rail-bed are:

  1. Solid - When you finish the 5 layer sandwich (for HO scale) this is solid. 
  2. Easy prep for the rail - just need to run a belt sander lightly to even out the top
  3. easy to build landscape off of - If you like the basket weave cardboard strips this is a real easy rail bed to attach to since there is a nice sized side.
  4. Even sweeps on curves - due to the way you build the sandwich the curves are quite uniform so you do not have any sudden diameter changes
  5. complex curves easy - S curves while a bit of work are easier IMHO than other rail beds we have tried
  6. low scrap - you are not cutting out bends out of plywood and having lots to toss.
A couple drawbacks are:
  1. You will use LOTS of glue - I do mean LOTS
  2. this takes more time - you have to let the glue harden and you have to be aware of ending each layer away from the other layers.
  3. tough to modify/takes much more planning - once laid out it is what it is.  not something you can tweak.  Hence this is not a track bed you can change on the fly.

More detail to come on this new bed - I am not liking my explanation will ask my co-builder to help on this. Or I will look for articles/pics on how to.





Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Benchwork - Backdrop time

Now the supports are up time to see why we ran the furring strips on the wall to the ceiling....

We wanted to have the view of a sky and distant hills on the wall to add more depth and realism.  We discovered 3 ways to do this:


  1. use the existing wallboard 
  2. use hardboard
  3. use floor linoleum

We did not like #1 as the wall was not all that smooth (it is a basement after all) and we did not feel like trying to get a primer of the right texture that would work.
#3 was an idea we discovered after we choose, basically go to your local big box home improvement store and get some scrap or remnant pieces of linoleum.  Color does not matter as you will be placing the "colored" side to the wall leaving the underside out.  bends easy and is easy to work with.  Dern, to late for us.....
So option 2 was the choice.  We cut the hardboard into 3' strips (the space from the top of the landscape level to near the ceiling), and attached to the furring strips with 3/4" wall board screws.


I went to the paint department of the big box store and got a bunch of the blue paint swatches.  I brought these and a couple pictures of mountain scenes we liked the colors of (mainly the sky) down to the room and laid them out under the same lights the layout would use.  Important to use the same lighting as your vision perception of color changes with type of color.  You do not even realize how much until you use a camera without flash and look at the results.  Who has not taken a picture of someone under incandescent bulbs that looked good at the time, but you were shocked how yellow the shot became under the neutral eye of a camera.


You can see the hardboard bent at a nice radius in the corner (linoleum would have been easier!) but we had to watch it as it wanted to flex to the wall if we were not careful putting it up.
.
We decided on that split the helix at the inside corner of the L in the room about 50/50.  This gave us the ability to change scenes between sides of the wall and forced a person to have to walk around the entire L to see the rest of the room.  Accidentally ended up being a real nice dramatic effect as you walk and keep seeing more....  From that decision we needed a S type bend (as seen in the left pic) and a C shape backed up to it (as seen on the right pic)   We ended up using the short strips cut off the other sheets and I cut some braces (1" boards with the curves cut in on both sides) to put between the hard board sheets.  Ended up working pretty good.

We picked the color that most closely matched the picture and had a quart mixed.  If you look at pics you will notice a couple things about the sky.  It is a lighter blue near the horizon and much deeper as you get closer to the zenith.  Since we were mainly dealing with sky closer to the horizon we choose the color applicably.

Also on trees you paint in the background the more distant the bluer they are.  So choose your near tree color and add little bits of sky blue into the color as you move back.

As you can see above we initially painted the hardboard thinking the seams and screws would not be that visible once painted.  We were wrong.  They really showed.  So we had to treat the screws and seams like we would if this was wallboard.  It was spackle time.......

Time to think about horizons and clouds.......

Monday, March 5, 2012

Benchwork basics - Level 2

OK, so we have the lower rail yards and the elevating helixes in place, time to add the second level bench work and to start layout out the track paths.  We will call this the landscape level as the lower level has none.

 We started with the bracing to hold up any of the future landscaping.  You can see in the picture to the left the braces being installed and tested for correct altitude and levelness.
When designing think in 3d, basically having tracks at different altitudes and changing levels while in view.
We wanted sever levels of traffic in the landscape so after a switch setup we ran the helix one more lap.  This got one layer of track 4" higher than the base layer.

In the picture to the right you can see the crisscross of the track at the lower landscape level and the end of the dual track helix another 4" up.  this gave us some real interesting twists we can do with the track loops.

Once we had all the initial landscape level bracing in place it was time to lay out the track to see how it would work.  We laid out cardboard sheets over the area and started to lay out the track.  We used our imagination to see the altitude changes between track lines.  Even so we discovered a couple changes in track pathing that would help out what we were trying to accomplish.

We decided which tracks to have exposed, which to put behind the ski mountain (the location we have in the pics, but we did this one section at a time for the entire layout), and where/how to transition between.

Once completed we took overhead shots and I knitted them together to form a panorama from which to work.  We also put this down on paper in the form of a plan.  This greatly helped us as we started the long process of laying track foundation pieces.

Below is the panorama.

We had fun placing various bridges we had discussing where/how scenarios (one of the dream pieces of the process).  The plan you see here has changes several times since as ideas were tossed around after an inspiration or one of us seeing something somewhere that got I wanting it on our layout.

That would be another suggestion I would have, don't be afraid to change something.  My first attempt at a trestle bridge is having a major change, but that is another post......



Benchwork basics - To helix or not to helix......

In our design this level was designated train storage and return loop that would be hidden from normal view. Once the lower level supports was complete we laid plywood down for the tracks.  we added applicable switches and a dual train yard, one for each main loop.  Since this really did not have any real imagination it was an easy job to lay down a one to many to one track layout for each loop.  We ended up with 6 track wide train yard for each loop.  More than enough for anything we were planning on running.

Next step is to layout the helix.  We wanted a slow and easy grade in the dual track helix.  The plan had a 36"x48" area for the helix and we were planning on a 4" altitude change per loop.  This would give us enough clearance between each loop to not scrape the roof of any car we were planning on running with the gentlest grade without greatly increasing the size.  Linear feet per loop was ~12' (144") with a 4" rise or 2.7% grade (4/144).

This helped set the upper level as 3 loops gave us 12" of difference (was in our initial plan but wanted to make sure prior to literally nailing anything down).  We added the upper level supports then started creating the Helix loops.  This is where the L part really came in useful.  So much so we added Ls to some of the lower level supports to aid in helix creation.  What we did is to layout the area the helix would run with cardboard making sure clearance track to track was sufficient to the longest of cars would not collide if we had trains meet in the loop.
 This provided templates for the custom cut straights and curve pieces of plywood for the dual loop.  We cut the pieces wide enough for the vertical supports to run through them. The supports we chose were 1/4" x 20 threaded rod.  Reasons were low priced, and very flexible as all we had to do to tweak the rise was to move a couple nuts, plus one set of rods would run through all levels of the helix making it quite a compact setup.  Remember to verify the cars will not hit the rods when running the loops.

 As you can see in the pictures we ran the threaded rod through the L and nutted it down.  Of course we used washers to avoid the nuts cutting through the wood.  so from bottom up the rod was nut, washer, L, washer, nut, space, nut, washer, plywood, washer, nut, etc.
The upper pic you can see the start for both helix loops and the lower level track feed.  These are Gilder in the foreground and Floren in the back (I think the plans were written before final names assigned).  The middle pic is Gilder where the mining area will be to the left of what you see.  The lower pi is 3 loops of the Floren helix.  You can see the upper level supports and the background board in plase, but that is another posting.





Sunday, March 4, 2012

Back to basics - Initial benchwork

Thought that I should get back to where we started.

First thing to do when you awant to create a layout is to plan.  I would suggest you start with an outline.  Items to have on the list incude scale and track code (we chose HO scale and code 100 track), era to model (we chose the 60s) as this will change the scenery and rolling stock you can or should not use.  Also to add to the list are items you want to have in the layout (e.g. large city, or mountain).

Additional things to decide prior to hammering the first nail:
  • What type of benchwork to use
  • Frontal legs on the benchwork or braced
  • single or multiple levels
  • width of shelfs
  • to DCC or not to DCC
  • how to power the entire layout
  • any special options (e.g. Fahler cars that also move)
  • Doing any lighting effects (sunset, night)
First - the room is a L shaped room 16'x16' (on the long sides).  So we designed on paper to wrap the walls all the way around giving up about 60' run end to end. 

We decided on having 2 levels, the lower for a rail yard to stoe trains, and the upper for show.
We stup helixes on each end to lift the trains from level to level.  Like everyone olse we will turn these into mountain tops.  We are looking at putting 2 cities, a large one in the middle and a smaller one near one end.
There are a bunch of layout pics we looked at that had ideas we liked.  So we worked at getting a decent flow as we moved around the layout. 

We are both movie buffs with "The Princess Bride" as one of our favorites.  So we decided to insert movie pieces into the layout.  Fun for us and a task for viewers tofind as many movie references as they can find.

The ends of the lines are Gilder and Floren (countries from the Princess Bride).  The main city is Hilldale and the town is Bedford Falls.  Thre will be many more movie bits inserted.

L-Girder installation was pretty easy.  We had decided in a braced front so there would not be any legs to stub our toes upon.  Se started with 1x2 furring strips on the wall then angled brace and top joist we leveled and set a level line down the wall so every one would be at the same altitude.  A laser level really helped this process.  They are not to expensive or your neighbor might have one you can borrow for a couple hours.  We capped each one of these with a 1x2 forming an L or more accurately looks liek a 7 (use for this top horizontal piece will be seen shortly).  We added the front "7" and a diagonal support as seen above.  The advantage is we would not have any legs needed on the front of the bench work.   We took our time making sure everything was level regardless of from where to where we checked.  We worked with a standard shelf width of 20" with expansion to 36"x48" for each helix.

Once the initial front/back braces were set we laid down the 1x4 joists spacing them 24" apart as the default.

Pretty quickly we had what looked like a long wrap around shelf in the making.

I do suggest you read all the posts on bench work prior to starting yours.  You might see something in a latter posting that will make you slap you head saying "DOH!" if you don't.

Next post will be finishing the lower bench work and adding the upper level.



Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Model Railroad resources - living post

Even trying to pull these together I discovered some more links I want to read/watch.  Remember google is your friend.

Here are some of the sources I have run into:

Online Magazines:
http://trn.trains.com/
http://modelrailroader.com/
http://model-railroad-hobbyist.com/

Online videos on http://youtube.com/  search for:
 - Miniatur Wunderland Hamburg
 - model railroad
 - model railroad scenery

DVD:
 - Series from John Fugate (on sale at http://model-trains-video.com/deal.php)
 - Dream, Plan, Build series



Sources for stuff:
Home Depot/Lowes - Plaster of Paris, wood, spray paint, stain
Grocery store - baking soda, parifin wax
Hobby supply store -
Wallmart/Target - white glue,masking tape, paint,

Monday, February 27, 2012

Plaster of Paris (PoP) stuff

Not sure about you, but in the little modeling I have done so far I have went through quite a bit of PoP.  Buying it from the hobby store in smaller quantities is very expensive.  Going to a Michaels is only a little better.  What I found is the local home improvement big box store is a real good choice.  I was able to get 4 times the quantity for a little more than what I had paid prior.

Tip for using PoP - dry times are quick (usable time about 5 min)  so make small batches or you will be scraping out your mixing bowl/bucket a bunch.  If you add 1 teaspoon of a cheap baking soda to the dry mix prior to water the cure time is increased to about 30 min.  A small side effect is the texture of the plaster does change a little which is not necessarily a bad thing, think of it as another way to add a different texture to your plaster work.

Another way to add another texture is to mix in play sand (another big box low price item) into the mixture.  roughens up the texture a bit.  I would suggest you try it to see if that is the texture you desire.

If you like hydrocal know that is a different texture and color than any of the plaster basic mixes.  Even after drying it takes coloration differently as it seems to be less porous than straight plaster so stays more whitish.

 Another big box store item that might work out for you is to get a bag of pine tree bark ground cover.  The large chunks that is.  if you carve them to fit to your hill they can look like a nice rock out cropping.  All you have to do is glue down and paint.

More tips and tricks I have found on-line or from experience to come.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Lodgepole Pine part 4 - Time to branch out

Got all the base work done.  One more thing to prep - I took a short deck board (heavy enough to be stable) I had and drilled 1/2" holes (size of the trunk) most of the way through (allowing me to pick up the board without the trees slipping through).  This allowed me to put the tree into the holder at any time and not have to worry about breaking off branches.

There are two methods people I read about used.  Top down or bottom up.  After doing it once I prefer the top down method.  I also prefer the dental pick over a drill as the branches I am inserting various diameter branches and did not want to fight that.

To glue the branches to the trunk I am using "super glue" because it sets quickly.

I started with the grey trunk and took the dental pick and pressed into the trunk near the top of the tree.  I quickly found out it is quite easy to split the trunk.  After pulling out the needle out of my finger and doing a bandaid run, I decided to use less pressure near the top of the tree and not put my finger directly behind the stick.

The split is not a bad thing if you take it easy as you can put a couple branches right at the top with the split.  Another oops to my advantage.....

So the basic process is to  stick the pick slightly into the trunk and wiggle it a little to make a depression for the branch to come.

Next step is to pick a branch about the right length. If a little long I trimmed it to the length I needed.  I gently held the branch and dipped the cut end into the CA.  Then positioned the branches (location and angles) holding still for 10 sec.  If the branch is still loose, I repeated the process.  I rotated the trunk to a spot that looked like it needed a branch and repeated the process.

The finding locations to put branches and what length/fullness are much easier if you have multiple pics of the type of tree you want to make.

One goal I wanted is to have a small stand of these trees with the track going between the trunks (branches above the train cars). 


More scenery tips next posting.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Lodgepole Pines part 3 - Getting Needled

Toughest part of this is getting good material to work with.  One source that was recommended was Michaels. The first bunch of dried caspia basil fern I found was nothing more than green sticks with a large bunch of busted up stuff in the bottom.  I found another bunch that was better, but that is only in comparison to the first one.  Give them credit I got 50% off because of the poor quality.  Later I discovered the local floral place would sell me some of the caspia they had.  Got nicer stuff and about the same number of good branches for the same price of $3.   Add to that the floral place sprayed the caspia Moss Green which is a pretty close match to what I was looking for.  Plus it covered any undesired coloration.
Now to prepare to make the branches:
With my teflon sheet pan MIA I grabbed a sheet of wax paper from the kitchen so the glue would not stick to anything.  I took one sealable rubbermade and filled it with the ground foam.  The second I put in 1 part of white glue and 4 parts water, takes a little mixing to smooth out the solution.
Once set it was time to cut branches.  Since I was going to need lengths ranging from 1/3" to 3" for the size tree I wanted.  After cutting a few I started dipping the branch end into the glue, allowing it to drip off a little, then into the foam.  I knocked off extra foam by holding the branch and tapping that hand with a finger from the other.  This way I was not knocking the branch directly preserving it a little.
Once foamed, I set them on the wax paper foam up.
I couple tips -
1. you do not have to completely soak the branch in glue, just the ends where you want foam (simulated pine needles).
2. If you do not like the look of the medium foam, try the fine.
3. find a color of spray paint for the branches that works with the type of tree you are working on and use it allowing plenty of dry time.
4. cut the branches longer than you really need. you can always cut them down for a specific spot.
5. don't be affraid to use both fine and medium foam, or 2 colors.

Next step is to assemble the tree.


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Making a lodgepole pine part 2 - Trunk Time

Today I will talk about what I did to make the trunks.
I cut about a 12" piece of each of the Balsa and Basswood 1/2" square sticks I bought (Pine to come later).
I used a nice sized handle razor knife I like because it fits my hand and I have decent control.  You can use a exacto knife or whatever you are most comfortable with.  I sure hope I don't have to say always cut away from yourself.......

I started with the base, just trying to get it mostly round.  Did not take too long to get a good feel just the angle to hold the knife to shave off just a little.once the base 3" or so was rounded I turned the stick around and it was time to work on the pointy end.  As I "whittled" away I accidentally went in a bit deep a few times or had a bigger hunk come out than planned.  No issue when this happens as there is no tree that is perfect, and each oops adds character and realism.

Once I got the rough shape to where I wanted it is time to add the bark look.  I read about using a wire brush, dremel, rasp, etc to mar the trunk.  With some of these either not available at that moment or me not thinking it would work the way I wanted I went to a saw.  The technique is to drag the stick across the teeth at a 90degree angle to the normal cutting usage.  Scraping groves down the length of the trunk.  Starting with lighter pressure, and increasing until you get the grove depths you want.
I started with a fine tooth saw.  not exactly what I was looking for, so I moved to a cross cut hand saw.  Again, not quite what I wanted.  So on to a rip saw.  Finally with the use of all 3 got the look I was looking for.  Nice groves some shallow, some deeper.  Once that was done the trunks had lots of wood scrapings hanging on.  More than I wanted so I took 100grit sand paper and lightly sanded the trunk to take off most of the bits without losing the texture.

Next step is to color the trunk.  I again hope I don't have to say don't do this in your living room, as the india ink overspray will cost you a bunch, and this is exactly what we are trying to avoid.
I mixed 2 teaspoons of india ink into a pint of rubbing alcohol making a grey wash.  I poured that into a small spritzer.  I coated the first trunk (over cardboard in the garage with the wife's car backed out) until I could see the grooves darker than the outer "bark."  I knew it would dry a little lighter than I had and it would be easy to coat it more if I didn't like the color.

After it dried I did think it looked too grey for the look I wanted but deferred to the ones that went before me.

They were right, once the branches were attached it looked pretty good.  The green of the branches/needles had the grey looking more brown that what I initially saw.

I then started on the second trunk this time with the basswood.  There was not that much difference in handling, carving, or coloring so I would suggest you start your own with the one you can get at a lower cost.  The other item I changed was I also wanted to make a Red Pine.  This pine has a more red bark so I lightly applied a dark oak stain on the trunk after I had colored it with the grey wash.  I attempted to minimize getting the stain into the groves (leaving them a dark grey), and just color the outer layers of the bark.  I used a paper towel with a little stain on it.  Almost using a dry brushing technique with the stain.  The red pine will be the second tree I attempt.

Basically I am saying to not be afraid of experimenting or making a mistake.  Sometimes these make the best scenery for your layout.  To the right are the 2 trunks so you can see the differences between the stained and non-stained trunks.

After taking this picture I took a piece of deck board (5/4 x 6 x about a foot) and drilled a couple 1/2" holes mostly through to provide a nice firm holding base so I could pause without damage.

Next step, making branches.






Monday, February 20, 2012

Making a Lodgepole Pine tree in HO scale - Part 1

A little while ago I saw a picture of a train rolling through a stand of lodge-pole pines.  Right there and then I knew I needed a bunch, and after finding the price of good ones set at $25 - 75 it was easy to figure out I needed to win the lottery or work out how to make them.
After doing a bunch of research (Google is your friend) I started to assemble multiple ways to make these trees.  So I will start trying these techniques and document the process and successes/challenges here.
First I am working in HO scale (1:87) and wanted a tree over 80' tall.  This works out to about a foot tall.  Scale has the trunk about 1/2" in diameter.
1. raw materials - wood - I initially bought 1 each of the following 3 options
  - 1/2" square balsa wood (came in 2' lengths)
  - 1/2" square base wood (also came in 2' lengths)
  - 1/2" pine dowel (3' length)
2. raw materials - caspia basil fern - dried
  - Michiels - What I found at the one closest was real dry and real beat up.  I got a pretty nice discount so I bought one bundle.
  - Local flower shop - WOW much better quality.  Bought a few sprigs.
3. other items needed:
  - rubbing alcohol
  - india ink
  - spritzer
  - white glue
  - 2 sealable low priced rubermades (I chose 3"x5"x3")
  - ground foam
  - Spray paint (medium dark flat green)
  - super glue
  - dark oak stain
4. other items needed
  - small cutter (I used an electronic sized diagonal cutter)
  - dental probe (needle on a stick, I prefer over a small drill)
  - wax paper to dry glued or stained items
  - water to dilute the white glue
  - wood block to hold tree trunk when in process
  - razor knife

 Next posting is making a trunk.



Introduction to the Blog

General subject matter of this blog will be what Steve and I do to create our model railroad.  I will list several locations on the net where we are posting pics of what we have worked on.

Steve got the OK from his better half (always a very good idea) to convert one basement room into a layout.  It is a L shaped room about 16' on a long side.  If we stretch out all the sides it would go about 60'
We are both movie buffs so we decided putting in pieces of some of our favorite movies.  e.g. The Princess Bride.  We are naming the end helixs Mount Gilder and Mount Floren (and yes there will be a cliffs of insanity).

As of today we have the base bench work completed using a L-girder method.  We have set and removed several roadbed types.  Not sure what the final will be, but.......
I will also talk about how I take pics of the various parts of the layouts - what technique I used to take a shot of.....

One of the biggest items we have run into, and probably one most modelers do, is cost to buy everything pre-built.  I will cover several techniques I have or will try to make various trees, buildings, scenery items, other various items that can help minimize costs.

One item I want to cover here is I have done hours of research online, watches lots of how to videos, and talked to many people who have been working on their layouts.  I am not directly copying anyone's material more of my combining all the gleaned wisdom and experience and my own and summarizing here.  I will post some of the many sources (ones I can remember) in a post shortly.

Feel free to use any and all I post in your layout, and if you do write something and do remember me as a source a quick reference would be appreciated.