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Not ink. Paint. Dip the stamp in the paint, then blot it to a paper towel. Kind of like dry brushing, but with a stamp. (dry stamping?)
The SSH stencils are the way to go in my opinion. When I get to that point myself, I will probably just use my cutter to make vinyl paint mask stencils and airbrush the markings on the road.
Hmm, wonder if I could have her make up a one off stamp......
BTW, these markings are generally not located right at the crossing. In most cases, they're located around 100 feet from the crossing; there are no markings at the crossing itself.
For your (apparent) era, with the old cars and steam loco, road markings weren't as standardized as today. It looks fine from here.
Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices 1942 -https://ceprofs.civil.tamu.edu/ghawkins/MUTCD-History_files/1942%20MUTCD.pdfSee Page 212Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices 1948 - https://ceprofs.civil.tamu.edu/ghawkins/MUTCD-History_files/1948%20MUTCD/1948-Pt2_Markings.pdfSee page 11.