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I'm working through my TV train mega project and contemplating a thing about my Micro-Trains flats: the prototype flats had white decks. And, of course, the white paint doesn't go all the way to the edge, which would make masking easy. No, there's a district yellow border. Have any of you attacked this task with satisfactory results before? Anyone have thoughts on how to attack it?
Now my new problem is getting past the mental block of weathering it and then figuring out how to make it look like James' photo. But that's true of just about all of my freight cars I guess.
This is a Newark, NJ shot from 1984 from FallenFlags:If you squint hard enough you can make out some white. I'd start my weathering that way - some strategically located patches of white blending into the yellow and a healthy amount of grime.
... And an Atlas car that's got it right:
I'll confess that the white deck on Trailer Train cars is about the hardest thing for my brain to get past as correct even though I know it is. Railfanning as a kid in the 80s, you didn't really see the decks and if you do from an angle and with all the weathering those cars endured, it just never seemed like white was a component. And I don't think any of the models were done that way back then. (in HO and N in the 80s) I even recall articles about modeling the Twin-45s in Model Railroader and maybe they did the white decks but I surely don't remember it if they did.I recall the first time I saw a photo of a newer 89ft car it seemed much like a builders photo and I figured the white was done for some event/"dog and pony show" or something. So it was probably 3 decades of ignorance then denial that has just made it weird. So finally I've come to accept the truth. Now my new problem is getting past the mental block of weathering it and then figuring out how to make it look like James' photo. But that's true of just about all of my freight cars I guess.