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Trees
Trees
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Sunday, June 9, 2002 6:29 AM
Hi Mike:
Thanks again for your help with the brake rigging. It's coming along but not finished yet. My work (I'm the worship pastor at my church) does not always allow for lots of free time.
I really did not know how Jack Work built his trees. I just sorta started doing them this way by trial and error. The result sure is great. But I don't want to take anything from Jack.
Blessings,
George
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Friday, June 7, 2002 12:42 PM
Hi, If how I made my trees will help you friend, you can see how I made them on my website.
http://www.badger-creek.co.uk
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Friday, June 7, 2002 6:55 AM
Hello George : nice to see someone using the methods of the late,great Jack Work ! Way to go !
Hope also your brake rigging is going well...[bet you don't do that in front of the TV..just kidding....]
best regards / Mike
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, May 30, 2002 9:45 AM
Here's how I have built foreground trees. It's cheap, not difficult but a bit time-consuming. Hey, ya' can't have everything. I am very happy with the result.
Start with dowels of various diameters, 5/16", 1/4", 3/16", 1/8". Cut them to the height you prefer. Taper them so that they are narrower at the top (I use a rasp).
Paint them various colors. I use several shades of grey, some black, some rust and some browns, and even a little red and green. Just combine and overlay the colors, don't be neat and don't wipe your brush as you change from color to color.
From a craft store you will need some air fern or something like that. Any greenish very finely detailed artificial foliage will do. For $5.00, I got enough to make dozens of trees.
With your pin vise and bits, drill an individual hole in the dowels for each piece of the artificial foliage. Use white glue to hold the foliage in the holes. Use smaller pieces at the top and larger pieces at the bottom. Spray the foliage with a cheap hairspray and sprinkle various shades of ground foam very lightly. This gets rid of the uniformity of color and adds a natural randomness that looks right.
I run the base of the dowel through a pencil sharpener, dip it into white glue and push it into my plaster cloth or foam terrain.
I do about 12 dowels of varying diameters at once. Then, while sitting in front of the TV with the family, I can finish several trees in a typical evening.
Hope that helps,
George in New Castle, PA
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Trees
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, May 30, 2002 9:01 AM
This is an age old question. I make trees for my layout but am never really happy with the way they turn out. Could someone suggest a tree making technique that has worked really well for them? Preferably cheap and easy but whatever works.
Thanks
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