The 83 Tip Challenge. Here are 83 layout building tips. I'll add in more photos as I find them. Depending on your personal preferences, some may be better than others. Your mileage may vary.
Run wild with it:
I love truth in advertising!
Frank that's a very constructive and thoughtful post.
A couple of comments:
70. Standard American doors are 6'8 high. That's actually 1 2/3 inches in O scale--just a little shorter. Unfortunately for the purpose of rescaling images, entrance doors are often substantially bigger. Another standard dimension that may be useful is the width of American trains, which is reliably 10'8, or 2 2/3 inches in O scale. Big road trucks are usually 8'6 wide, which is unsurprisingly the width of a domestic intermodal container.
76. I was puzzled by the word "cyclone" until I realized you were talking about cyclone separators.
Bob Nelson
lionelsoni Standard American doors are 6'8 high. That's actually 1 2/3 inches in O scale--just a little shorter.
Thanks Bob. You are correct. I rounded it to seven feet for simplicity. 1-5/8" would be 1.625". Eleven sixteenths is probably closest.
Good info on widths. Thanks.
Frank54Don’t use organic materials. Using materials such as coffee grounds on your layout is always a bad idea, as it will eventually draw “critters.”
I'll second that one. I used a dried plant material labeled as "Candy Tuft" on the layout I started in the 90's. While it made for fairly realistic looking trees due to the plants tiny sized leaves, it started to get "fuzzy" after a few years in the basement. (I also noticed tiny worms liked the stuff.) I had to sray the stuff with Raid ant spray to stop the deterioration and disposing of them entirely was the only safe answer in the end.
Frank54Made in the shade with file folders. Manila folders make great window shades for your buildings. Cut a small piece to match your window size, lightly mist it with flat black paint and scotch tape it in place varying the heights.
Tissue paper is another good one as it models shear drapes very well. And since you can get it in a lot more colors than just white, you can add a good deal of variety on the cheap.
Frank54HO items work too. HO or even N scale tank cars make great propane or oil tanks to enhance your scenes.
Fences especially. I used a Bachmann HO scale picket fence to make garden fencing and I even made a trellis out of broken pieces.
Frank54Mist your structures. A simple weathering technique is to “mist” your structures with black, or cream colored spray paint. Hold the structure about 12-18 inches from the spray can and blast a single cloud of paint towards the structure. It adds a nice dull tone giving your structures a real world worn look.
I'm going to have to try that one!
Frank54You can easily achieve a “peeling paint” look on your wooden structures using rubber cement. Paint your structure with a base coat of an underlying color and let dry thoroughly. Randomly dab some rubber cement in places where you want the paint to appear to be peeling. Paint the entire structure with your final color. Once dried, rub back the areas where rubber cement is beneath the final coat with your thumb. The rubber cement will peel off revealing the underlying color. Distress with some chalk and you have a building with an underlying color showing through randomly.
You can also use artist's masking fluid. It's sort of rubbery and can be "erased" when dry.
Frank54Ball point pen parts can be used as cyclones adhered to the outside walls of manufacturing facilities. Springs from the same pens can be used as track side debris.
Another unlikely use for pen caps is window awnings:
The two small ones on the firehouse are from depleted gel pens while the larger one in the center was a cap for a map reading tool. Keep that junk box full!
Great stuff! Thanks for starting this thread!
Trains, trains, wonderful trains. The more you get, the more you toot!
Nice awnings Penny.
This post was kind of a social experiment. Interesting result.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.
Get the Classic Toy Trains newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month