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I don't think think that company logos copied into a pattern look very realistic. Real loads have a lot more texture and variation to the wrapper. (Not to mention loads that don't have wrappers.) These appear to be done from photos which I think comes out better.I've started trying to make some from proto photos, and I'm making some headway, but I don't have good photos for all the ones I'm interested in and I thought these looked good.
Back in the day I assembled few. IIRC, they were just wood blocks with some paper wrapping, and black thread for straps. They looked ok. Mine are still mounted on a centerbeam flat (which I have stashed away somewhere).
The NSN loads I have were photos of actual loads, designed to be cut out and wrapped around a wooden core. All of the banding, between-layer dunnage, everything, was part of the photos. The only other pieces were stripwood for under the bottom layer and between the two sides of the load. If used on a centerbeam car, the stripwood in the center wasn't needed.Somebody in Canada (CS Models?) made wrapped lumber loads that were made the same way as the prototype. Individual wooden blocks, each wrapped with its own wrapper, then stacked into a load. They were hard to keep neat while stacking, but allowed more variation than the NSN loads.
Nowadays, it would be easy to get those blocks 3D printed, and then print your own paper wrappers. Company logos are on the Internet.
If you have access to a bandsaw, the blocks are pretty simple to cut. 3-d printing a featureless plain box seems like overkill for that technology.I've done a whole bunch of different lumber loads this way (in HO) making my own paper wrappers which I detail here, and provide a lot of the graphics I've played with. Most of the files are in HO, but most of them could be converted to other scales.http://vanderheide.ca/blog/lumber-loads/Feel free to use any of these, and convert to other scales if desired. If there are any popular ones, I may do some N scale versions and upload them.
I guess part of what I'm looking for here is feedback on those who may still have or have seen those loads, if they look as good in person.
Doesn't someone out there have a PDF of lumber car loads that can be printed and cut to suit?
I've done a whole bunch of different lumber loads this way (in HO) making my own paper wrappers which I detail here, and provide a lot of the graphics I've played with. Most of the files are in HO, but most of them could be converted to other scales.http://vanderheide.ca/blog/lumber-loads/Feel free to use any of these, and convert to other scales if desired. If there are any popular ones, I may do some N scale versions and upload them.
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