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Photoetched railings would be closest to scale, and best looking.Another possibility would be Gold Medal Models fire escapes. But those are fairly short, so you woudl have to put together multiple pieces for longer runs.
best is steel wire in the appropriate size, and spot welded together ...but the plastic ones are pretty easy, and look kinda okay ?
I used 1/4 hardware cloth......a bit oversize, but looked good from normal viewing distance
Wouldn't 1/8" mesh hardware cloth made with 27 gauge wire be darn close to scale? https://www.ebay.com/itm/24-X-5-1-8-Wire-Mesh-Hardware-Cloth/360897753454?hash=item54072eb16e:g:BY0AAOSwwAdZ8KlB27 gauge wire is 0.0147" diameter, which is 2-1/4" in N scale. And the OSHA top rail height is 42", which is 0.263" in N scale. So 2 rows of the 1/8" mesh gives us a top rail height about at the OSHA level plus a middle rail at the OSHA 21" level, within 1 to 2 N scale inches. Of course, the galvanizing is certainly thicker than scale.
That stuff is called "cloth", so I suspect that it is woven, not flat, and spot welded at each intersection. That would make it useless as railings.
You have the means to spot weld very thin steel wire in your workshop? Tell us more!
yes, made one from a couple of large capacitors, and a triac for triggering ...an old variable power supply charges it up through a load limiting resistor, about 16 to 19 volts usually does it rather well... made it roughly seven years ago ,,here's the link https://www.modeltrainforum.com/threads/todays-projects-auto-reverse-spot-welder.21254/#post-246205