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Dave, looks awesome! If you wanted to try Kudzu Jesus's arms again, what about using a thin piece of wire, perhaps like what comes with a tortoise motor for the length of the arms? That way you could sculpt them to whatever arc you want.
As for thin red striping on the drip edge, why not use some red decal stripes? You should be able to find a set that matches your needs, and then there are the UP red stripe sets MicroScale sells.
Can you take one itty bitty macro shot of that roof for me @davefoxx ??
Dave,I keep showing Patricia (from southern Virginia) your kudzu pictures and she's extremely impressed...probably more than she is with any of my scenery attempts, anyway!Now...the elephant in the room. Southern pines. Longleaf and loblolly. The next giant leap. Any ideas?EDIT: Found this, not sure if it "scales" well to N:http://model-railroad-hobbyist.com/node/15501
A ran into this issue when I was trying to model Apex, NC with my oldest son (the layout that got recycled into the Colorado Midland). Since it was meant as a father-son project with a minimal amount of difficult scratchbuilding, I went with the Woodland Scenics "pine trees." The more I look at those the more I realize they don't really look like any species of tree I've ever seen, Eastern, Western, European, or otherwise. I recommend staying away from those.I think what you may have to do is say, two or three "clumps" of these trees of less than 10 trees apiece just to give the feel. 'Cause honestly it's just not North Carolina sandhills country without 'em. My house in Apex backed against a huge longleaf pine forest. That damn pine straw is everywhere also...I'm guessing a rusty orange electrostatic grass (if you can find one) scattered horizontally would do the trick for longleaf pine straw.If I come up with any bright ideas, I'll let you know.