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Base paint on foam for my great northern railroad layout.

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  • Member since
    November 2010
  • From: duluth mn
  • 187 posts
Base paint on foam for my great northern railroad layout.
Posted by nscale rob on Tuesday, June 14, 2011 8:16 PM

I am thinking about useing copper penny because it simulates the dirt under the turf. rocky mountins.

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

  • Member since
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  • From: duluth mn
  • 187 posts
Posted by nscale rob on Tuesday, June 14, 2011 9:13 PM

no, i will be useing the sandy brown color

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

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  • From: Central Vermont
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Posted by cowman on Tuesday, June 14, 2011 9:54 PM

If your modeled area has a lot of exposed dirt, I'd use the color closest to the dirt color.  In my area of the Northeast most of the soil is very dark, but is covered with grass.  The color you see under the green is more the tan of the dead grass thatch just above the soil surface.  That's why I use a tan color.  If I do a plowed field, I will use a much darker color.

Good luck,

Richard

  • Member since
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  • From: duluth mn
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Posted by nscale rob on Tuesday, June 14, 2011 10:18 PM

it is a pine forest.

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

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  • From: Eastern Shore Virginia
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Posted by gandydancer19 on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 9:58 AM

I don't think the color really matters that much.  Any color of brown or tan should do.  All you want to do is prevent the blue, pink, or construction material color from showing through, if you missed a spot, after you apply the base cover of ground foam / scenery material.

If you are planning on painting the layout base, then just sticking in some trees for your forest, it will not look very real no matter what color of paint you use.

Elmer.

The above is my opinion, from an active and experienced Model Railroader in N scale and HO since 1961.

(Modeling Freelance, Eastern US, HO scale, in 1962, with NCE DCC for locomotive control and a stand alone LocoNet for block detection and signals.) http://waynes-trains.com/ at home, and N scale at the Club.

  • Member since
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  • From: duluth mn
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Posted by nscale rob on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 12:33 PM

gandydancer19

I don't think the color really matters that much.  Any color of brown or tan should do.  All you want to do is prevent the blue, pink, or construction material color from showing through, if you missed a spot, after you apply the base cover of ground foam / scenery material.

If you are planning on painting the layout base, then just sticking in some trees for your forest, it will not look very real no matter what color of paint you use.

i am useing ground cover and then i am going to put the pine trees and other stuff in.

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

  • Member since
    November 2010
  • From: duluth mn
  • 187 posts
Posted by nscale rob on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 1:16 PM

color matter because there is a correct color for each area like if you are modeling a layout in southern mn where i am from  you want to use a more yellow brown color because the sandstone and limstone bluffs. like  the sandy brown color will work  for the rockey mountins and i found that out by looking at a photo of the rocky mountins

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

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  • From: East Haddam, CT
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Posted by CTValleyRR on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 7:39 PM

nscale rob

color matter because there is a correct color for each area like if you are modeling a layout in southern mn where i am from  you want to use a more yellow brown color because the sandstone and limstone bluffs. like  the sandy brown color will work  for the rockey mountins and i found that out by looking at a photo of the rocky mountins

The point isn't that soil colors don't vary from place to place.  They do, and we all know that.  The previous posters were making 2 points:

1) The actual color you paint your layout doesn't matter (as much), because most of the time, when you look at the ground, you aren't seeing bare soil anyway; and

2) No matter how close your paint matches the native soil color, your layout will look lousy if you don't add ground cover in most places.  A freshly plowed field is one of the few places you would expect to have NO ground cover.

Connecticut Valley Railroad A Branch of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford

"If you think you can do a thing or think you can't do a thing, you're right." -- Henry Ford

  • Member since
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  • From: duluth mn
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Posted by nscale rob on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 8:42 PM

ah,

robert aldrich

n scale i know and the alco line plus great northern

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Posted by steinjr on Thursday, June 16, 2011 12:21 AM

 

  • Member since
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  • From: Mountain Home, Arkansas
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Posted by John Tayor on Thursday, June 16, 2011 9:08 AM

You should go outside and get some pine needles (if you can) and break them into tiny little pieces, then sprinkle then on the ground below the trees. Then it would REALLY look realistic!

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