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I’m sorry Bob but I take issue with some of your statement. Some of us aren’t trying to win an NMRA award with our layouts or models.Some of the tooling of these kits are 40+ years old with grossly out of scale brick/mortar detail. There is nothing wrong with putting lipstick on a pig of a model and doing your best to make it look ok, and there is nothing wrong with having a “good enough” mentality. If those of us with any sizable layout treated every single element as a piece that should win an award we would just about never have a relatively completed layout. Maybe you want every piece of rolling stock to be a 40 hour project, plenty of us do not. I’ll end it with I’ve seen many efforts that look great to the eye when looking close to a model, but when subject to macro photography don’t hold up. Some of those efforts are amongst the best layouts I’ve witnessed.
Bob, for some it's a hobby and not a job!
Even the best modelers have a distance at which the model vs real illusion breaks down. IMHO, the best layouts achieve congruence between the different areas (scenery, structures, track & train) at approximately the same viewing distance. Personally, I tend to prefer modeling to an overall general effect distance of about 2-3 feet for n-scale. Much closer than that and the general effect begins to break down in one or more major areas.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
I think Bob simply dislikes the "3 foot rule" statement. There is no such official "rule" in model railroading. He is ok if people don't detail their models to the Nth degree - just don't say that those models are specifically built to fulfill the 3 foot rule.
Thank you for your personal opinion. Is your opinion governed by a "rule" stating that 36 inches defines what details are worthy or not worthy?? Good! Because there is no "rule" that governs that aspect of the hobby. In my personal opinion, there are areas that should be highly detailed and other areas that should be impressionistic...a pleasing (to me) combination of construction and art, with absolutely zero influence by an imaginary "rule" or a magical distance of 36 inches.
Mmmmmm! Orange Milanos!
No, those are Mint Milanos!
In answer to your question— absolutely not. I feel, if anything, that 3’ might be a reasonable minimum standard for a modeler to use for evaluating their own work but it’s certainly no rule. If the subject continues to look good as you get closer, that’s even better. More details should emerge the closer the viewer gets, but many times, that’s when the textures begin to break down. Ballast becomes too course, wood siding gets fuzzy, paint gets rough looking, ground cover looks like ground foam, details look over sized, and bi-focals stop working. ...
...Of course, turquoise & pink aquarium rocks used for scenery never looks good.