My trees vary from Woodland Scenic Armatures to Super Trees to puff balls depending on location and they are planted on varying surfaces, plaster, plywood, or foam. Most require a hole to be drilled. With foam I just put a drop of white glue in the hole before planting the true. With the others I find the hot glue gun to be the best method. With the Woodland Scenics Armatures, they can be planted on a flat surface using the base. To make them look right I use a little filler material to conceal the space between the base and the trunk then paint over it.
I mount my trees the same way I mount figures. I use a small steel wire through the base into the scenery. This allows the trees to be moved, posed, and even exchanged with other types of trees.
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I do this becuase I consider photography to be a part of Model Railroading.
This might not be right for most people.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
As others noted, whether I drill a hole depends on tree and location. On foam the trees punch through easily. When I make my own from flower wire and cord, the wire easily goes through the foam and so too from mesh insulation on a BBQ skewer. Foam is a great way of adding/moving trees easily.
Depends on the tree and the ground. If the ground is plywood or MDF I drill a hole and stick them in using a small amount of white glue to hold them. On ground made from plaster soaked paper towels draped over a cardbord skeleton I just glue them using that really thick white glue from Woodland Scenics which is thick enough to hold them upright until it dries.
I use a 1/8" drill bit to make a hole at least 3/4" deep if my goop/foam can stand it.
I drill holes in the plaster-on-screen landforms, put a little white glue or carpenter's glue on the base of the "trunk", and plug the tree into the hole. Here are some background trees positioned to determine where the holds need to be drilled...
...and some trees temporarily set in place, with another row positioned to determine hole placement...
The plaster dust gets vacuumed-up before the trees are glued in place.
I also used a similar method to install some short wooden skewers, then applied a little more glue to the exposed portion and impaled some lichen on them to represent underbrush. It got dusted with some hair spray and ground foam after installation...
...and the same area filled-in a bit more...
Wayne
My layout base is pink foam, and I also use pink foam to add contours to the surface. I sometimes add plaster cloth on top of that to smooth the contours, and then a layer of Gypsolite plaster to get a gritty, rough "natural" surface in wooded areas.
I take an awl, punch a small hole, and stick the tree in. If it doesn't end up in a firm spot, I add a drop of white glue.
When I buy a package of pre-made plastic trees, they usually come with bases. I save those for the situations where I don't have a soft spot where I want a tree, like where I've used hardboard for the scenery because there's a subway line right beneath the surface.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
I poke a hole using an thin screw driver and I use a drop of wood glue to attach the trees.
Michael
The Breitenbach - Rosenheim Railroad V3
A previous Thread on topic
http://cs.trains.com/mrr/f/11/t/208637.aspx
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.
Getting ready to make lots of mature trees for my HO scale layout. Have never really paid attention to how you all attach trees to the scenery. Do you drill a hole in the scenery? Use a hot glue gun? Others?
Thanks in advance,
Mark