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Do it yourself HO scale tree project

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  • Member since
    August 2006
  • From: Franconia, NH
  • 3,130 posts
Do it yourself HO scale tree project
Posted by dstarr on Thursday, August 7, 2014 5:28 PM

After Tony Koster's tree article in MR a few months ago, I decided to give it a try.  I went on a walk thru the fields and ski slopes around my house, with a pair of diagonal cutters, and harvested a couple of plastic shopping bags full of decent looking weeds.

I picked quite a big bunch of 'em. 

I made a simple tree rack to hold them while painting.

And give 'em a coat of light gray auto primer.  I don't have a spray booth.  Out of doors works OK for me.

Then do the hair spray and sprinkle with ground foam thing and plant them on the layout.  I used an awl to poke deep holes in the foamboard.  Stick the tree trunk in the hole, no glue, the foam reforms, closing the hole tightly about the tree trunk.  Here is a small grove at the Bunkbed Tunnel entrance.

A single hero tree filling an unused corner.

A shade tree beside the big house.

Some scruffy small tree/shrubs along the big liftout section.

And a scrawny little feller by the creamery.

 

  • Member since
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  • From: Central Vermont
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Posted by cowman on Friday, August 8, 2014 10:36 PM

Dave,

'Tis the season.  Just saw my first golden rod blooms, which have been shown often here.  Have  noticed another weed that looks promising, as well as one I have used before that is nearing time to harvest.  A couple of years ago I planted some sedum, harvested a couple of times, but have yet to get any fixed up an on the layout.

I like your idea of spraying the weeds gray.  The natural plant color is usually a brown, whereas most trees are a gray.  Will give it a try when planting time comes around.

Have fun,

Richard

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, August 9, 2014 4:16 AM

David,

I am perfectly aware, how difficult it is to make realistic looking trees and that´s why I have so far shunned away from it. Are you happy with the trees you have made? Without wanting to be a PITA, but I think they lack "body"

Trees look like this:

Maybe you can enhance them by adding the dreaded moss to them and then sprinkle the ground foam over them.

  • Member since
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  • From: Franconia, NH
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Posted by dstarr on Saturday, August 9, 2014 10:45 AM

Well, they are good enough to plant on the layout.  You are right, the trunks want to be thicker, and they want more twigs and leaves to fill out the sillouette and round out the tree.  I tried some woodier twig trimmings.  They had the desired thickness in the trunk, but the hairspray and ground foam didn't stick well, and the result just looked like a twig. 

  • Member since
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  • From: Canada, eh?
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Posted by doctorwayne on Saturday, August 9, 2014 12:31 PM

Good start, Dave, and the first step is always the most difficult.  Once you've made it, it becomes a lot easier to expand on the theme.

Plant heads of various types are useful scenic items, and low bushes are one area where you don't need to do a lot to improve them.  Not sure what these are, but there's some spirea flowers and some cut-down golden rod.  I simply dipped 'em in some clear urethane that was no longer needed, then threw some ground foam onto them.  Stick 'em in a piece of extruded foam to allow them to dry, then plant them on the layout:


Here's an over-all shot of the same area.  There are a couple of slightly larger trees to the right, but those along the backdrop and on the slope above the tunnel portal are simply blocks of cushion foam, painted dark green and then covered with polyfibre.  This was sprayed with cheap hairspray, then sprinkled with ground foam:


These are, I think, golden rod, with the leaves and other unnecessary bits removed.  I plan on re-doing these by adding polyfibre and more ground foam, but I've included their ugliness here to demonstrate one way of thickening-up their spindly "trunks".  I used florists tape to bind several stalks together - it comes in many colours, ands I probably should have used a dark grey rather than brown. Embarrassed  It's available at craft stores, and is self-adhesive, much like friction tape - you can see it best on the middle of the three background trees:


These young trees are from a bush which grows wild around this part of southern Ontario, and probably everywhere with a similar temperate climate, but I don't have a clue as to what it's called.  The stems are reddish-brown and should have been painted, but they make nicely-structured small trees like those which spring up along creeks and rivers.  I stretched green polyfibre over the branches, then sprayed it with cheap hairspray and sprinkled on some ground foam, followed by another spritz of hair spray:

These are similar, but planted closer together.  I use several colours of ground foam, and both medium and fine textures.  There are also some foam-coated lichen bushes to flesh-out this background scene.  The origin of the lone dead one is unknown, but it was used as-found:


If you plant trees in groups, you can get away with making the lower portions of ones within the group less bushy, but those on the visible edges and all of the tree tops should be finished enough to look presentable:


These background evergreens are simply bottle-brush-type Christmas trees.  I stretched s little bit of polyfibre over some of them, then gave 'em the hairspray and ground foam treatment:

Here's a larger tree, about 60' tall, made with multiple twigs bound together with florist's tape.  I'm not totally satisfied with it, so it'll need some adjustments before it's planted permanently:

Same tree, but the one in the background is closer to the look I wanted:


Give polyfibre a try.  It usually comes in some shade of green, but black works well if you can find it.  Most hobby shops carry some version of it, and MicroMark offers larger amounts at decent prices. Poly fibre is also available, and much more cheaply, at fabric stores, but all I've been able to find is white and it cannot be tinted or dyed.


Wayne

 

 

 

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  • From: 4610 Metre's North of the Fortyninth on the left coast of Canada
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Posted by BATMAN on Saturday, August 9, 2014 1:13 PM

I also put a few stalks together either with tape or very fine wire. I then dip them in a thick mix of Plaster Of Paris up to where the first branch in the trunk is. After the plaster dries I hit it with the paint. I think they look really good as the plaster hides any evidence of multiple trunks being joined together.

Brent

"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."

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    January 2008
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Posted by saronaterry on Saturday, August 9, 2014 4:41 PM

Like Richard said. Goldenrod is my "tree" of chioce:

Terry in NW Wisconsin

 

Terry in NW Wisconsin

Queenbogey715 is my Youtube channel

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Posted by gondola1988 on Saturday, August 9, 2014 9:05 PM

The plaster of paris is a good idea. I use what they call floral tape to put 2-3 branches together then dipping it in the plaster would look great. What you guys have done is great, I do some track work and then switch to scenery it keeps the hobby moving along. Jim.

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Posted by saronaterry on Saturday, August 9, 2014 9:10 PM

I've also used florist tape to put a few trunks together, but the dipping in plaster idea is great! Instant root base! Never thought of that. Thanks!

Terry in NW Wisconsin

Terry in NW Wisconsin

Queenbogey715 is my Youtube channel

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Posted by 0-6-0 on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 9:29 AM

Hello nice tree's Dave I had some like that. They did not make to move to the new layout. I need to make some more. I did make some out of sunflower roots. They are made with fine turf and hairy spray.

they great dead tree's

and I have some puff ball trees also

Have a nice day Frank

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by wp8thsub on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 9:41 AM

You can add multiple stems to a separate armature, in the process building a fuller tree.

The larger trees here are Supertree material attached to sagebrush trunks with gel super glue, set quickly using spray accelerator.  They have bulk that individual pieces of Supertrees lack.  Other natural materials can be substituted for a similar effect.

Here's a closer view at a tree built using this process.  Once the whole thing is painted, and leaves added, the individual parts become indistinct and the whole thing looks like one tree.

Rob Spangler

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  • From: Sweden
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Posted by Graffen on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 3:14 PM

The trees when looked from a distance look like a solid mass. I guess that puff balls and others are a very good solution in HO and smaller scales.

Swedish Custom painter and model maker. My Website:

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  • Member since
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  • From: Franconia, NH
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Posted by dstarr on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 5:02 PM

Wayne, Rob, Terry, Graff,0-6-0, 

    A lot of really good looking trees.  I'll try to match some of them on my next batch.

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