0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
My sense is that you have an aged snowpack, one that has sat on the ground a few days, maybe melted a bit, so that the edges are rounded and the piles smoothed. Plowed up areas are not sharply defined, and some dirt is starting to melt out preferentially.
Well, if that is the sense you are getting, then I can claim success. That is exactly the type of snow I was after--whichever of the 23 that may be. I had thought about a blue tint, but I am a little leery of monkeying around much more with what I have; I fear losing the effect I've finally achieved.
Is that why they have 23 words for it?
Any skier can come up with at least a dozen on demandPowderPacked powderHard packSlushSugarMashed potatoesLake effectCorduroy (admittedly not naturally occurring)ChatteryChoppyRefrozenDriftI'm sure there are plenty more.
You forgot corn and washboard.
I had no idea this was going to be a snowy layout!
...the HMR will be 1930s in the winter... I thought that making the track snowbound would disguise the rail height and tie spacing issues.
Y'all all left out yellow as a snow type.
And yet, nothing that describes yellow snow!