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I use that sort of cardboard for all of mine, but they are small T or N scale layouts. I doubt it would scale well for more ambitious projects. Also, I don't layer it, but fold it over into irregular box shapes, often with an additional layer or two on top to pad and fill out holes. It works very well for what I do, but for your purposes...
I will try that approach too. Maybe some of my Amazon boxes will keep their original shape and act as scaffolding. They're meant to be strong in that shape. Thank you.Also, that viaduct is gorgeous! Is there some place where I can see more?
I am thinking of laser cutting balsa wood in a similar manner, once I find the software that generates terrian by layer. It shall be safer for your health than the styrofoam which emits poisonous styrene when cutting it using a hot wire.
I can't begin to imagine the cost for the amount of balsa it would take to cover even a small HCD layout.Scott
I'm just imagining all that cardboard turning to goo when you soak the ground cover with alcohol and scenic glue.
On a more realistic note, I used Florist OASIS foam for a small layout a few years ago. It sported the obligatory minimountain with tunnel. I attached the plaster rock castings to the foam with hot glue. Then I mixed up a small spectrum of rock tones and colors, dotted them onto upper surfaces of the castings, and then drizzled turpentine down those faces. The sweet smell of turpentine flooded the room, distracting me from the lava-like crawl of molten foam from pockets below the rock faces. Those rocks looked beautiful as I tossed them into the trash.That's just one reason I desire to use the cost-free cardboard accumulating in my basement. Oil paint is sooo forgiving. At least until it hits foam.