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Nice model. I hope somebody comes along and restores the barn--it's sad to see one in such condition. I have to note, though, that the "impossible thin window frames" mentioned in the model160.com blurb are, in fact, not thin at all. They're done with a trick I've seen before in ceramic buildings, where alternating panes are solid and open in a checkerboard pattern. This turns the window frames into surface relief, not standalone features. It may be an effective trick, but as a casting it's far from "impossible."
Quote from: Zox on March 24, 2012, 11:19:07 PMNice model. I hope somebody comes along and restores the barn--it's sad to see one in such condition. I have to note, though, that the "impossible thin window frames" mentioned in the model160.com blurb are, in fact, not thin at all. They're done with a trick I've seen before in ceramic buildings, where alternating panes are solid and open in a checkerboard pattern. This turns the window frames into surface relief, not standalone features. It may be an effective trick, but as a casting it's far from "impossible."I can see where you'd arrive at that conclusion, though at least one opening is not done that way. I suspect that a thin layer, like cellophane tape, was placed in the window openings to help create the two part mold easier. And only some window panes were removed as the castings were prepped, assembled, and painted. The resulting resin film in the windows is thin enough to look like dirty glass... why the odd pattern was removed? Who knows... maybe something to do with which panes had bubbles and didn't look realistic or something on this particular model. Anyway, here's a shot of the fine window detail that doesn't have the alternating checkerboard... and it also shows how the castings allow light between the boards!
I suppose the existence of the actual model proves that they arn't impossible... Regardless, it's the best adjective to describe the effect this model had on me in person. These are some of the finest castings I've ever seen, and you probably know I'm hard to impress these days.