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The one time I tried static grass, years ago, it was one color of Woodland Scenics 2mm. It looked like a lawn. This time, I am doing a mix from 2mm to 7mm for these unmaintained areas. I am randomly mixing a variety of lengths and colors to get the effect. The static grass is a mixture of Woodland Scenics, Heiki and Silflor. I apply 50/50 white glue and water, with a little 90% Iso alc., in random patterns. When dry, I layer on a little more to get better height variations and to fill in open areas with a slightly different color mix. I mix in some home made grass tufts that are various shapes and sizes. There are a few "War Painter" commercial tufts that have a leafy texture mixed in, but these tend to be small, uniform round tufts. I also sprinkle on a little dry grout (tans and browns) while everything is wet. When dry, I hit it with a vacuum. I'll use shorter lengths and fewer tufts in better maintained areas. It is really nothing special, but I am trying to use a consistent color pallet, in a random way, if that makes any sense.I have only done static grass along about an 8 foot section of foreground scenery right along the fascia so far. (Attachment Link) Wow WAR PAINTER, Alan Scott Montgomery makes sage with long static grass and other "materials". Martin Welberg isn't gonna like this.
Always love seeing photos of the layout @Pomperaugrr and the balance you've achieved between the trains and the scene itself. Roughly how deep is the layout in this section with the warehouses?Thanks!
Wow WAR PAINTER, Alan Scott Montgomery makes sage with long static grass and other "materials". Martin Welberg isn't gonna like this.
Since I don't know what was grown in the Willamette Valley in the 70s, I wouldn't be much help with the elevator traffic. However, if I remember right, they grew a lot of grass for seed, so it could very well be grass seed.An elevator could also be run in reverse, receiving various grains by rail, and shipping it out by truck. In that case, it would probably, though not always, have a covered unloading area for the railcars, and a covered loading shed for the trucks. Many feed mills looked like grain elevators for just that reason. They'd receive bulk grain by rail, then sell it in small batches, as well as custom blending it for various livestock. The mechanics are the same, only the way the grain moves through the elevator is different.
. . . so I am still thinking about what to do with all of my trough roofed 4427s, 4470s and 4450s.
@John, you just get back today ? My parents were on the Legend this week