MBL wrote: Here is my X-mas layout. It includes an aluminum Christmas tree! Here is is in the dark: Here's the Commodore Vanderbuilt rounding the bend: TimMBL Sure hope that Aluminum tree don't decide to shed it's needles ! I remember as a kid my aunt & uncle got one when they first came out, the color wheel was something else. Kind of ironic that the same color wheel concept is in use toady with the fiber optic systems.
Here is my X-mas layout. It includes an aluminum Christmas tree!
Here is is in the dark:
Here's the Commodore Vanderbuilt rounding the bend:
Tim
MBL
Sure hope that Aluminum tree don't decide to shed it's needles !
I remember as a kid my aunt & uncle got one when they first came out, the color wheel was something else. Kind of ironic that the same color wheel concept is in use toady with the fiber optic systems.
Remember the Veterans. Past, present and future.
www.sd3r.org
Proud New Member Of The NRA
Some fun pictures here. If someone could tell me how to attach pictures, I'd show some of mine. Obviously I'm a newby on here.
Rick
"No childhood should be without a train!"
Ha ha this is awesome: "Screw presents we need trains under there!"
Pictures of our Christmas in the City Dept. 56 buildings and a loop of G guage from a couple years ago.
Not quite complete, but some photos with the 2338 dressed up in some contemporary colors.
fifedog wrote: Since my trains no longer "fit" beneath my tree, I have to live vicariously thru you guys. Thanks for sharing everyone.Clint, it's simple, but I could lay on that carpet for hours watching that tinplate run circles around that pretty tree.
Since my trains no longer "fit" beneath my tree, I have to live vicariously thru you guys. Thanks for sharing everyone.
Clint, it's simple, but I could lay on that carpet for hours watching that tinplate run circles around that pretty tree.
I hear ya fifedog.....about the space under the tree. A number of years ago when I started pulling my stuff out of storage, I heard the same thing when my wife said there wouldn't be enough room under the tree. Fact is, there wasn't enough room for all the presents, with or without the trains. But a small set up is better than none, especially when you don't have a layout elsewhere for the time being.
She asked me to go out and buy a small plywould board as a base to set the tree on so it would be more stable vs. sitting on the rug. I guess I overdid it because I came home with a 4 X 8 sheet, covered it with a white sheet, plopped the Christmas tree in the center, and set up the track, Then I pulled out all of her "Christmas Village" pieces, many of which were lighted, and plugged them in.
When she came home she was an unhappy camper at first nwhen she saw the trains. But she liked the total concept of the covered board with the white sheet, the village, and the trains. The trains stayed and the presents found a spot nearby.
And when family and friends came over Christmas Eve, and later New Years, she realized that I had created "the tradition." No one spent much time away from the trains outside the living room, except to reload in the kitchen.
The interest in trains bites nearly everyone. I just can't seem to get the dogs to accept them.
Jack
IF IT WON'T COME LOOSE BY TAPPING ON IT, DON'T TRY TO FORCE IT. USE A BIGGER HAMMER.
fifedog wrote:Clint, it's simple, but I could lay on that carpet for hours watching that tinplate run circles around that pretty tree.
Thanks for the nice comments, Bruce.
- Clint
I've been meaning to shoot a photo or 2 of our "Christmas" train running on the Jumijo. Percy (in a Santa hat) pulling a hopper full of coal, A hopper full of snow and jingle bells, and a gondola full of Christmas trees. A red Lionel Lines caboose adds a nice touch at the end. But I've been too sick to fiddle with photography lately.
Jim
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Thank you all for the photos, and keep them coming! It's great seeing the kids shots, and some of the really old and newer iron prominently displayed.
I made the mistake of telling my wife they sell scented smoke drops and promptly got interrogated as to exactly what scents they had, since she doesn't like the standard odor so much.
"Gee, I don't recall all of them. I'll run down to the train shop and check it out FOR YOU." Ain't I a great husband?
vbkostur wrote: my really complex layout video...http://youtube.com/watch?v=fuxPyetITEU (notice the "mountain" tunnel made from the box the UPS guy brought!)
my really complex layout video...
http://youtube.com/watch?v=fuxPyetITEU
(notice the "mountain" tunnel made from the box the UPS guy brought!)
Nice train! I just got word that 2 of the 3 new OSU cars are not being released until at least January...Nothing like missing the shipping schedule twice...
I have expanded this years Christmas layout to include a second level, so now I can operate 3 Lionel Postwar Trains. The layout is decorated with 50's and 60's toys.
This year's oval under the tree layout.
Robert
http://www.robertstrains.com/
No snow or fluff for this year, little ones seem to like to pick at it and guess who spends time cleaning the fuzz off of and out of axles & running gear.
Since these were taken the ceramic Christmas tree has been replace with four of the "Alpine Style" artificial trees, the other half likes them better but I haven't really made up my mind, yet.
RIP Chewy - best dog I ever had.
Great pics, guys! Here's my little Standard gauge layout from a couple years ago:
RockIsland52 wrote: What good is the living room space if it's empty? Looks like you will have to scale down on the size of the tree! Most living rooms are simply receptacles for furniture anyway. The trick is seeing if you can get away with leaving it up until St. Patrick's Day.........2009. Jack
EJN wrote: Thats one heck of a Christmas Tree Train setup Roland. Whats your other half say to that size setup.
She begrudgingly allows it since our daughters 4 and 2 find it pretty entertaining. She won't like keeping little fingers out of the snow and buildings while I'm at work days...Buying the Dept 56 and Lemax things and making it a more decorative vs. trains only display buys me some slack!
Roland
Brutus wrote:I had an HO set as a kid and that tunnel also brought back some fond memories! I was thinking of doing that on our Christmas layout, but wrapping the box so it looks like the tunnel goes through the presents...
I had an HO set as a kid and that tunnel also brought back some fond memories! I was thinking of doing that on our Christmas layout, but wrapping the box so it looks like the tunnel goes through the presents...
a tunnel makes it nice when it bedtime for the kids. you just say, "it's time for the trains to go night, night", as they slowly back into the tunnel and go to bed. if my son can see the train, i have no chance of getting him into bed.
Ah the joy of Christmas ..... Trains.
Thats one heck of a Christmas Tree Train setup Roland. Whats your other half say to that size setup. My wife would laugh, nod her head and get lots of mileage out of talking to everyone about it.
They all look great.
Hey USNRoL
What good is the living room space if it's empty? Looks like you will have to scale down on the size of the tree! Most living rooms are simply receptacles for furniture anyway. The trick is seeing if you can get away with leaving it up until St. Patrick's Day.........2009.
Here's some shot's of mine...
FasTrack layout. Very large...(I'm still recovering from several years without ANY trains!) I know many people may frown on overbearing Christmas layouts, but I don't have a permanent layout and we have the room in the living room sooo...
Tree is going up today in upper left corner of the above photo.
I hope to post more photos over the next few weeks...
Here's our Christmas layout for this year. We had to cut back a little , but its still fun!
Make sure your train set is off when you water the tree!
This is last years layout. Very simple. This year we will be doing something similiar. Just got our tree last night. Brrrr, very cold last night.
I was reading some older threads you would get a kick out of, and you'd fit right in. In one thread all the guys were taliking about how their cats would hide in the tunnels. And the other raged on about the ridiculous prices people pay for train boxes on ebay. That box from the UPS guy could have been worth $5,000 on ebay if you didn't cut the holes and make a tunnel out of it.
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