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Home picked trees, by the bucket ; Update Pictures

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  • Member since
    March 2017
  • 8,173 posts
Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, May 15, 2019 6:28 AM

Good morning.  Those are some great looking trees Southgate.  I don't think I've seen any better.  Maybe we should call you The LoraxLaugh

I really enjoy making trees.  Kind of a relaxing pastime.  I have made many pine trees so far but I haven't tried making any Deciduous trees yet.  They do not look as good as yours.

Almost every year, Judy and I go down to the Conservatory at Como Park to see the bonsai trees.  They have pruning competitions.  Those things are really neat, they are small but they look huge.

I only wish I had the resources up here so I could try what you have accomplished.  I think I'll go down to the thicket by the marsh areas to see what grows there.  I sure hope bug spray works as tick repellentTongue TiedLaugh 

Keep up the good work.

TF

  • Member since
    January 2004
  • From: Canada, eh?
  • 13,375 posts
Posted by doctorwayne on Wednesday, May 15, 2019 12:42 AM

I agree...great looking trees on great-looking armatures!  I wish there was something like that growing in this area.

Wayne

  • Member since
    January 2017
  • From: Southern Florida Gulf Coast
  • 18,255 posts
Posted by SeeYou190 on Tuesday, May 14, 2019 3:59 PM

Man, I picked up some weeds I thought looked great on my trip out West, but they sure don't look that good.

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Great looking trees!

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-Kevin

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Living the dream.

  • Member since
    April 2019
  • From: Pacific Northwest
  • 780 posts
Posted by SPSOT fan on Tuesday, May 7, 2019 3:14 AM

Nice looking trees! I should try making trees your way, it seems to yield some great results.

Regards, Isaac

I model my railroad and you model yours! I model my way and you model yours!

  • Member since
    April 2013
  • 917 posts
Posted by Southgate on Tuesday, May 7, 2019 1:26 AM
  • Member since
    April 2013
  • 917 posts
Posted by Southgate on Sunday, March 31, 2019 4:45 PM

Thanks for the comments, guys. Mike, all of your scenery looks great. I don't know about the polyfiber stuff, but seeing is believing. I like your lower lying bushes. How do you make them? I need to make believible blackberry bushes, as I am modeling the Oregon coast. 

Yes, these would make good winter trees, but my layout is set in an endless late summer, not quite fall. Nice and warm!

On the subject of trees, I made these evergreens probably 17 years ago. Balsa trunk and caspia branches, painted gray, and flocked with WS turf or something. The lower right one is how they look before paint and flocking.   I thought they looked pretty good, but apparently they taste good too, as my wifes dog got into a box of 6 or 8 of them right after I made them and ATE them all! (These replacements are safe) Dan

  • Member since
    January 2015
  • From: Southern California
  • 1,682 posts
Posted by Lone Wolf and Santa Fe on Sunday, March 31, 2019 1:52 PM

Those trees would look great just how they are for someone modeling late fall or winter when all of the leaves are gone.

Modeling a fictional version of California set in the 1990s Lone Wolf and Santa Fe Railroad
  • Member since
    May 2010
  • From: SE. WI.
  • 8,253 posts
Posted by mbinsewi on Sunday, March 31, 2019 10:07 AM

UNCLEBUTCH
Have you try useing some poly fiber to help fill them out? I got mine from an old pillow.

Yep, that's what I use to represent the fine branch work.  After attaching it to the main "tree", usually with spray glue, I paint it, let it dry, then cover with foliage.

It works good, you can shape the bunches of "branches" the way you want.  The paint helps hold it all together.

All the tress in this scene, except pine trees, were done that way.

I still like those deerbrush trees.  What an excellent start.  Some areas, you wouldn't need the fiber fill.

Mike.

  • Member since
    November 2015
  • 723 posts
Posted by UNCLEBUTCH on Sunday, March 31, 2019 9:50 AM

mbinsewi
Those are perfect looking armatures! Nothing like that grows in WI.

Your right about that, the best I can find is golden rod, ok but not like what you have. And in my price range.

[unless I missed it] Have you try useing some poly fiber to help fill them out? I got mine from an old pillow.

I have used both Scenic Exp. and Noch leaf Ithink both are good, jut got a bag of W.S. havn't used it yet

  • Member since
    May 2010
  • From: SE. WI.
  • 8,253 posts
Posted by mbinsewi on Sunday, March 31, 2019 6:56 AM

Those are perfect looking armatures!  Nothing like that grows in WI.  Deerbrush, it does look a lot like what I had bought once, and the seller called it sage.

Whatever it's called, it's perfect, in my eyes!

You could probably sell that stuff.

Next time I make trees, for foliage,  I'm using the fine leaf foliage, from either Scenic Exp. or, I think Noch makes a "leaf" foliage.

Mike.

  • Member since
    June 2014
  • From: East Central Florida
  • 480 posts
Posted by Onewolf on Sunday, March 31, 2019 6:33 AM

Those look like some great tree trunks to start from....

Modeling an HO gauge freelance version of the Union Pacific Oregon Short Line and the Utah Railway around 1957 in a world where Pirates from the Great Salt Lake founded Ogden, UT.

- Photo album of layout construction -

  • Member since
    April 2013
  • 917 posts
Home picked trees, by the bucket ; Update Pictures
Posted by Southgate on Sunday, March 31, 2019 2:06 AM

 I'm now in full swing scenery mode. I've dabbled and experimented some before, and learned a few things, but now the layout track and infrastructure is all done pretty much. So now I'm all in for all types of scenery including trees.

Living in Central Oregon, on the "high desert", east of the Cascades, there is an availability of a few plants that lend to the cause.

Silver sage has long been a favorite for scale modelers. East of town (Bend) it's a predominant plant. Finding a dead one with a tight growing pattern takes some looking but yeilds great trees when you find one.

There's another plant that grows right here in the 'hood, I don't know what it's officially called, but I've heard it called deer brush, bitter brush, and generically refered to as sage, which it's not. You have to be picky with this one too, finding tight concentrated growth.

Today I poked around in my neighbor's way back yard Whistlingand picked a 5 gallon pail of what looked like good specimens. (Oh, don't worry. He'd have me take it ALL, just a weed around here. He's paid me to haul trailer loads away already)

I have about 56 trees here in varying sizes. The more brownish ones with loose bark are the dead silver sage. The gray with smooth bark is the other, deer brush. There are also 2 metal WS in here someone gave me sometime back.

The front row, in front of the  HO Alco S-1 are pretty much as nature produced them. I just trimmed them to size and shape.

The back row took more work. Usually both of these plants seem to have branches that are rather one sided, and need to be filled in all the way around. I kept a few flat sided ones for up against the backdrops. You can see the whitish "grafts" as explained below. I'll paint them in later.

Luke Towan did a super video on You Tube how he modified what he calles saltbush in Australia. This deerbrush looks a lot like that stuff to my eyes so I followed his instructions in rounding out the structure of both the deer brush and the silver sage using superglue and baking soda to join and reinforce additional branches. I have about 3 hours into this deadwood forest so far, but...

Like his trees, I'm going to add Scenic Express "Super Trees" seafoam plant branches into these trees for finer twig structure before flocking them with "Super Leaves".  I ordered all that stuff a few days ago, along with static grasses to play with. Any day now...Stick out tongue

I'll post progress as it occurs. Dan

 

 

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