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Nice effect; the tender is especially good. I think subtle can be harder to pull off than the more seriously aged. My suggestion (other than the coal as already noted) is to try adjusting the coloration of the siderods and, in particular, the valve gear. Even on the most bedraggled steamers, the valve gear was clean and shiny, as they were usually slick with lubricants, and the siderods seemed to get less dirty than the wheels.
Even on the most bedraggled steamers, the valve gear was clean and shiny, as they were usually slick with lubricants, and the siderods seemed to get less dirty than the wheels.
To me, it seems the only shiny part of the rods is the piston rod itself, everything else has a pretty uniform coating of grime. At times, the rear drivers were lighter in color, due to ashes being dumped from the firebox behind them.
The problem, (in my humble opinion) is that scale gloss is HARD to do in N scale.
Quote from: pbrooks on October 27, 2007, 11:14:54 AMThe problem, (in my humble opinion) is that scale gloss is HARD to do in N scale.Quite true. Gloss is a very difficult finish to pull off successfully. So too is the unevenness of sheet metal. No real boxcar, for example, has the perfectly smooth sides that mass-produced models have; yet, if the surface of a model was made to replicate the subtle undulations of real sheet metal (which I imagine would be a tooling nightmare) , it would tend to look like a mistake.Nice scene, Phil, BTW. Great smoke effect.
Really? Look closely at this Fine-N-Scale car. All their PRR and B&O steel cars have "wavy" sheet metal, just like the prototype!