Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
There is no such thing as a bad day of railfanning. So many trains, so little time.
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Here are 10 hsitoric buildings that can be constructed from cardstock and they are free to download. They are HO scale but if you know how to enlarge the files on your computer, you can double the size and print them in O scale. I haven't tried them yet, but the downloads look very interesting and they say there are more models to come in the future.
http://www.illinoishistory.gov/ps/construct_mainstreet.htm
Back in the 1950's the magazine Toy Trains regularly published buildings that you could cut out and assemble to use on your layout. They were usually on the back cover, but if I remember correctly there were some published inside. I have almost a complete run of the magazine and I am looking for the rest. I would never cut up the originals but a digital library of all of the issues has been put out and you can print the cutouts.
Greg
The Northwoods Flyer Collection
of
American Flyer Trains
"The Toy For the Boy"
John,
Typically a laser paper will not provide a very good image from an inkjet paper. The paper needs coatings to accomodate the ink as oppossed to dry toner. You will not harm an inkjet printer with laser paper, but you CAN DAMAGE A LASER PRINTER WITH INKJET PAPER !
The finish coatings on inkjet paper (particularly gloss finishes) are not designed to withstand the heat generated by the fuser assembly in the laser. It could result in chemical coatings adhering to the fuser, resulting in a very expensive repair.
Greg - Do you have any idea who may have those images available on DVD ? I've been trying to find them. We are starting a Kids Club at our club and thought they would be good craft projects.
Thanks for any help.
Don
Don,
I bought mine on eBay, but they are marketed through Hybrid Systems Ltd. Here is the link hslinc.com.
Toy Trains was originally published by Carstens Publications. Reading through the old articles and looking at the old pictures has been great fun, and I don't have to worry about damaging my paper copies.
dbaker48 wrote:Greg - Do you have any idea who may have those images available on DVD ? I've been trying to find them. We are starting a Kids Club at our club and thought they would be good craft projects.Thanks for any help.
I seem to remember Thor's site having a link to a site with many paper building sets. And they might have been free! They were the sort of colorful stuff that kids would enjoy making.
Yeah, they are still there. Just checked. Go almost all the way down his home page and you will see a list of links to free cardstock building kits. See link below:
Free Paper Kits
Jim
The 3 buildings here( Brown's Drugs, Larson's & the Apartment Building) are all made from cardstock kits. I think I got them at a train show about twelve years ago and I think the name of the dealer was Pioneer Valley Models. Not sure if he's still around.
If scale is important to you, simply doubling HO pictures will make the buildings too big for American O, since HO, which stands for "half O", is actually half of the British 7-millimeter O scale. Blowing the pictures up to 181 percent will get the American scale about right. However, those running traditional equipment might consider a slightly smaller size, around 160 percent, which approximates the 1/55 scale often estimated for O27.
S-scalers should blow up HO to 136 percent.
Bob Nelson
Celebrating 18 years on the CTT Forum.
Buckeye Riveter......... OTTS Charter Member, a Roseyville Raider and a member of the CTT Forum since 2004..
Jelloway Creek, OH - ELV 1,100 - Home of the Baltimore, Ohio & Wabash RR
TCA 09-64284
Here's a sample of the Halls building from the Illinois Main Street website that I did using foamcore. I printed the pdf out at 175% (slightly smaller than true O-scale).
Appologies if these links have already been posted. Here are the Haunted Mansion Paper Models.
http://www.haunteddimensions.raykeim.com/
Follow the link for PAPER MODEL PURGATORY (been waiting for his Phantom Manor due soon)
Also:
http://www.disneyexperience.com/news.php
They sell Disney Paper Models on CD, as well as rotate some free ones every month or two.
Bobby
Those Main Street Illinois buildings are great! And some of them can be used as false fronts against backdrops as well as their intended 3 dimensional use.
Here is a scratch built building that I have just finished. I used foam core with brick paper (printed from my inkjet) glued to it. The raised brick corners of the building are made from separate foam core pieces, then covered with brick paper and attached to the building. The corrugated door is made from a starbucks hot coffee holder and painted silver. The windows are thin white paper with black inkmarker bars and glued to the inside. The window sills, headers and roofline accents are made from strips of wood. The base is made of plywood and painted concrete color. I still want to add a sign and floodlight over the door. The building has an usual non symetric shape so that it will just fit in the small space between my inner and outer 027 loops. It actually sits on top of (and hides) one of the remote switches. I designed it somewhat larger than O scale so that it would fit in with the operating crossing guard and postwar crossing gate that are nearby. You can click on the images for a larger view.
dsmith
I like the building, nice job.
Here are some paper buildings.
http://cs.trains.com/TRCCS/forums/t/190349.aspx
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