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I have to say Tom that your work is awe-inspiring and really motivates me to get cracking. How long have you been modeling trains?
Quote from: railbuilderdave on January 03, 2008, 09:44:00 PMI have to say Tom that your work is awe-inspiring and really motivates me to get cracking. How long have you been modeling trains? Thanks!I've been weathering since 2004. For the longest time, it was the only thing I would do within the modeling realm.
Tom,Are you referring to the "Floquil" Polyscale Paints color "dirt" and "Dust"? I know I'm green so I want to be sure I'm thinking of the correct items you mention here.FYI - I'm reading the PDF file now and I must say thank you for sharing your knowledge with everyone.Till the next post. :Dave
FYI - I'm reading the PDF file now and I must say thank you for sharing your knowledge with everyone.
Quote from: railbuilderdave on January 04, 2008, 05:07:01 PMTom,Are you referring to the "Floquil" Polyscale Paints color "dirt" and "Dust"? I know I'm green so I want to be sure I'm thinking of the correct items you mention here.FYI - I'm reading the PDF file now and I must say thank you for sharing your knowledge with everyone.Till the next post. :DaveFloquil and Polyscale Paints are two different brands. I get Polyscale from MicroMark:http://www.ares-server.com/Ares/Ares.asp?MerchantID=RET01229&Action=Catalog&Type=Department&ID=108
This is one of the neatest little locos available. It supposedly is a Davenport, but Chris333 pointed out that it doesn't really seem to follow any prototype (typical for narrow gauge modeling - think Malcom Furlow!). I've been sitting on this project for months because I kept going back and forth about buying a pricey detail kit. In the end, I decided against it (mainly due to the weak dollar) .This is more of the salt weathering that I've been doing a lot - since it works well in the larger scales. The base paint is Krylon Rusty Metal Primer, a light coat of Polyscale Rust (sprayed from far away - more like trying to get speckles) and then another coat of Steam Black (applied in the same manner as the Rust). I let this dry and then selectively wet the model with water and sprinkled on sea salt. The more salt, the more rust shows through. I wanted a top coat that looked more like old glossy paint that is peeling and bubbling off, so I mixed in about 40% Future to Polyscale Reefer Yellow. My wood cars used the salt as a mask, and with a light coat of paint, kinda made the surface look like old, faded paint that chipped off. But this time, in addition to the masking effect, I wanted a more bubbly and peeling look. I decided to complete saturate everything with paint, with the intention of using a stiff brush to knock the salt off. And it worked well enough to make me happy.There are some rogue salt crystals in some of the hinges ;D :Close up showing the bubble effect: In context on my large, massive basement layout with helix to the attic:
Where did the photos go?
Unfortunately because that was over 15 years ago did not upload those photos to TRW Gallery. They were hosted on http://www.mannresearch.com and obviously long gone!Tom's book on weathering there are some examples of salt weathering method. Buy it.
Had a copy on my nightstand the night of my neighbor's fire 2 years ago. Alas a casualty of the FD ripping my master bedroom ceiling out to keep it from spreading through my attic.