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JOHN ALLEN! (wanna fight?)

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Posted by vsmith on Monday, December 15, 2008 10:26 PM

Capt. Grimek
Irv, I just now ordered a DVD copy from trainvideodepot.com for $30 plus 3.00 shipping. I didn't find anything cheaper or used online. Hope that helps. They're in CA. (Don't remember if I saw a VHS version listed there if you meant video, literally...)

 

I got mine thru them too, but at a show. watched it again its definelty like 30+min out of the 40 of film

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by Capt. Grimek on Monday, December 15, 2008 6:59 PM
Irv, I just now ordered a DVD copy from trainvideodepot.com for $30 plus 3.00 shipping. I didn't find anything cheaper or used online. Hope that helps. They're in CA. (Don't remember if I saw a VHS version listed there if you meant video, literally...)

Raised on the Erie Lackawanna Mainline- Supt. of the Black River Transfer & Terminal R.R.

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Posted by corsair7 on Monday, December 15, 2008 6:45 PM

Capt. Grimek
Thanks! If anyone happens to actually time the filmed sections, just as a recording studio/production guy aside from MRing, I"d be curious. If it's near 20 min. I'm in. This man has been a hero of mine for decades and I had always wished that motion pictures existed and only found out last year that it did. If anyone happens to see a used copy at a cheaper price listed somewhere and would PM me that would be greatly appreciated as well. Otherwise it'll have to wait until the new year.

Where can I get the video? I might be able to buy one now since I've been lucky to have unloaded alot of stuff recently on Ebay and the money is there now to buy this. I still wouldn't pay $300 for a used book so the video just may give what the book could. To bad I never bought my own copy. But that's life, I guess.

Irv

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Posted by Capt. Grimek on Monday, December 15, 2008 6:31 PM
Thanks! If anyone happens to actually time the filmed sections, just as a recording studio/production guy aside from MRing, I"d be curious. If it's near 20 min. I'm in. This man has been a hero of mine for decades and I had always wished that motion pictures existed and only found out last year that it did. If anyone happens to see a used copy at a cheaper price listed somewhere and would PM me that would be greatly appreciated as well. Otherwise it'll have to wait until the new year.

Raised on the Erie Lackawanna Mainline- Supt. of the Black River Transfer & Terminal R.R.

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, December 15, 2008 4:58 PM

I haven't watched my copy for a while, but I'd say there's maybe 20 min. of film footage. It's broken up into segments as I recall, so the narrator will talk say about John's narrow gauge interests and it'll show some stills and some footage of the narrow gauge in action while the narrator talks about it. I can't remember who the narrator was (not sure he was even identified?) but I think it was a friend of John's who was familiar with the layout.

Stix
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Posted by Capt. Grimek on Monday, December 15, 2008 4:06 PM
Thanks! As you probably saw on my earlier post/question, I've been holding off due to $ and already having all of those still photos in that wonderful book. If there is at least 20-30 min. of filmed motion footage out of that 40, I think I'll pick this up! At $35 on sale, yet, I wanted to be sure it'd be worth it. Thanks for getting back to me/us about the length of filmed footage.

Raised on the Erie Lackawanna Mainline- Supt. of the Black River Transfer & Terminal R.R.

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Posted by vsmith on Monday, December 15, 2008 11:48 AM

I picked up the DVD on the G&D finally got to see it

BUY IT!

Dam the guy was good!, this is just a capsule summary, but the DVD sadly short at just under 40 minutes, includes many still shots but is mainly composed of a never finished film that was in production when Allen died and never finished. So what you can see is parts of the G&D at its hight in full glory, professionally shot on great color film. Definetly worth it as one thing video allowes is to see the layout in action, and the moving camera allows to see how there was no part of the layout that wasnt detailed, I now see where the detailing logic behind the F&SM came from, every square inch of the layout has to looks "lived in".

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Sunday, December 14, 2008 4:08 PM

John Allen made people think I guess about their approaches to the hobby as such. much like Malcom Furlow. I find that some of the arguing about prototypical depictions of MRR'ing has the same note as that of an artist having to deal with questions about 'realism'. We forget we are arguing over RE-presentation not the thing itself. If I use elves on my layout instead of humans of what use would it be for a negative nancy to get all in a bother about it anyway?

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

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Posted by gooddrop on Sunday, December 14, 2008 12:47 PM

I agree 100%. I like to make things as much as anybody, but they look a whole lot nicer when produced from a blueprint or a set of directions clearly written.

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Posted by Autobus Prime on Monday, December 8, 2008 12:49 PM

wjstix

One thing that I think has gotten overlooked is that operation was very important to John. At that time, off-layout staging was rare - you made up trains in a yard, ran them over the layout, and broke them up in another yard. Layouts were built to have as long a mainline run as possible, to provide a sense of distance and to allow for plenty of industries - even if it meant looping thru the same scene three or four times.

w:

Yes, the focus then leaned towards the concept of a real transportation system, where our present focus is more towards the appearance of a real transportation system.

Nowadays we tend to take exception to the shortcuts that were involved, but perhaps, from the other point of view, too much reliance on staging (for example) to make the railroad look real to the observer, might make it feel less real to the operator.  I think the most interesting model railroads combine both ideas, however.

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Posted by CNJ831 on Monday, December 8, 2008 12:46 PM

TA462

Wasn't Mr.Allen a very good photographer as well?  Could it be that his photograph's made his layout better then it actually was?   I know that you can hide a lot of flaws when you take a picture of a car so I'm sure you can do the same with a layout.  His pictures were spectacular weren't they.  Just something to think about.

Precisely...and something I attempted to point out well up-stream in this very thread.

A good photographer can totally trick the viewer into thinking details, or scenery, exist in a picture of a layout when something totally different and prehaps much less impressive actually exists. John was a master of this sort of thing. Specific camera angles, unusually wide-angle (for the time) shots, superimposing multiple scenes, using mirrors to expand a scene - all of these were used by John to great advantage in his layout photos.

Take a look at the G&D photo on page 88 of the current MR. What appears to be a vista of a huge yard is, in fact, a shelf a bit more than 3 feet wide and perhaps 7 feet long. Fully half the image is just a reflection of the scene in a large mirror. So...less than half of what you see there truly exists.

Now look at the picture on the next page, showing the yard at Gorre and beyond. It looks like the scene's background goes on and on. But does it? Heck, no! What you are seeing is a type of composite shot I've used myself on many occasions. By cleverly positioning the camera as he did, John has us looking across the upgraded but quite small original G&D layout, across several feet of aisleway, to the shelf carrying Angel's Camp beyond, which was 12 feet or more from the camera! However, from this angle, the scene appears to be one solid piece of railroad.

In neither case (as well as in many other of John's photos) does the image honestly depict what the layout would look like if you were actually present in John's layout room. Photo images are in 2-D and as such are subject to all sorts of trickery that in a 3-D presentation of the same scene would never fool the viewer.

ALWAYS keep this in mind when looking at layout photos, whether they be by John Allen, or anyone else.

CNJ831

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Posted by Midnight Railroader on Monday, December 8, 2008 10:39 AM

TA462

Wasn't Mr.Allen a very good photographer as well?  Could it be that his photograph's made his layout better then it actually was?   I know that you can hide a lot of flaws when you take a picture of a car so I'm sure you can do the same with a layout.  His pictures were spectacular weren't they.  Just something to think about.

While that's true, plenty of people operated on his layout, regulars and guests.

I don't think they'd have been so glowing in their reports of the experience if the reality of the layout was not as good as the photos.

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Posted by PASMITH on Monday, December 8, 2008 10:25 AM
Amen. This does not surprise me. Thanks for sharing this experience with us. Peter Smith, Memphis
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Posted by wjstix on Monday, December 8, 2008 8:15 AM

trainfan1221

I will take reading about his first layout or his second one anyday, I find his original small layout to be more interesting by far than the large one.  And as someone with a small layout I certainly can appreciate it more.  

It's interesting to note that in operating sessions, John liked to often run the train that ran up the branchline that used the original layout as it's core. Apparently that was a favorite part of his layout to him also.

I went back and looked thru the Westcott book again over the weekend. (BTW it should really be called the Westcott - Hayden book...Linn Wescott died well before the book was finished, and Bob Hayden came in as "editor" and put it all together.) One thing that I think has gotten overlooked is that operation was very important to John. At that time, off-layout staging was rare - you made up trains in a yard, ran them over the layout, and broke them up in another yard. Layouts were built to have as long a mainline run as possible, to provide a sense of distance and to allow for plenty of industries - even if it meant looping thru the same scene three or four times. I believe many of the later articles he wrote were about train operations, not scenery. I don't think JA was building a layout to be a way to show off his scenery skills, it was meant to represent a working railroad...and from what I can learn, did so quite well.

BTW someone mentioned something about John "doing what the masses wanted". I think that's not true. From what I can gather John wasn't someone desperate for attention, although I guess once he got going amongst friends he could be a pretty good talker. He sounds like a fairly quite, polite guy who liked trains.

Stix
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Posted by Capt. Grimek on Sunday, December 7, 2008 10:00 PM
Two anecdotes about two artists featured/mentioned here: When I was the teacher of a Behaviorally Disabled Class (read: street punk/delinquents to most) who had driven off every teacher they got that year, they accidentally discovered a copy of John Allen's book (Kalmbach) in the school library. Got totally enthralled with the idea that this model railroading thing was a HOBBY anyone could try and asked if I could take them to a train show that was coming to our nearest city. (Unfortunately due to liability issues and school field trip non-budgets, I couldn't arrange this...) but the effect of this book on these kids was not only surprising but inspirational! I hope that some of them went on to participate in the hobby somehow after my contract finished. I supplied and we built and weathered a few models and joked about how much more fun this was than sharpening switch blades! Some of these kids were pretty dangerous customers and this hobby didn't fit into their hellish home situations, but John Allen showed some of them that one could create one's own "world" that was a happier and safer place they could hopefully someday retreat to if they could hold a job and save up some dough. A few others went on to prison most likely, but I and Mr. Allen couldn't save 'em all... When I was a kid, I was not known for cleaning up my bedroom/4X8 layout room very often or very well. My Dad used to peek around the doorjamb and mutter, "How 'bout cleaning up this room? It looks like a Jackson Pollock painting in here!!! When the film came out I had to rent it so I could finally see what my father was referring to! ;-) I for one, wish this book would be back in publication and think it's a crime it isn't. If you were to photocopy a copy for your own use only, it would not be a copyright infringement by the way. I treasure my copy and refer to it for inspiration all the time. It's been a huge incentive for me to finally get my first "real" layout built and finished eventually. It is NOT worth $300 bucks however!

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Posted by trainfan1221 on Sunday, December 7, 2008 7:55 PM

But where's the logic?  Okay, before we get too off subject...

As I have said before, I admire John Allen's accomplishments and his place in the history of our hobby.  The G&D was quite a layout.   But I am guessing from the thread title that all opinions are up to scrutiny, so I will say this.. I like seeing many other people's work just as much if not more sometimes, and as I am far from a master modeler myself I greatly admire what many have accomplished.  I don't see myself ever getting close to doing what some people can.  

I know John has a huge following, but my opinion?  I will take reading about his first layout or his second one anyday, I find his original small layout to be more interesting by far than the large one.  And as someone with a small layout I certainly can appreciate it more.   So no, I am not looking for a "fight" as the title suggests, just offering a slightly different opinion than many others might.  Maybe someone else already has, in which case this can be added to that line of thinking, haven't had time to read this whole thread.

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Posted by citylimits on Sunday, December 7, 2008 4:33 PM

To paraphrase those who have gone before us:

"It is art, Jim, but not as we know it"

 Alien

Cheers

Bruce

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Posted by selector on Sunday, December 7, 2008 12:20 PM

Begging pardon, but also begging the question......

Mischief

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Posted by Convicted One on Sunday, December 7, 2008 11:43 AM

dehusman

[

One firestorm erupted because Furlow put a fellow in a sombrero holding a rifle on the pilot beam of the engine.  People were complaining how sterotyped it was, if not downright insulting.


 

 

Just because there is an aggregate of boneheads willing to agree that they have been insulted, does NOTHING to invalidate the source of their ire.

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Posted by HarryHotspur on Saturday, December 6, 2008 11:08 AM

steinjr

HarryHotspur
And of course the same thing applies to model railroading. Some MRRs have the outstanding vision and talent to create original works which are pleasing to the great majority of viewers. Others lack this talent, and are thus limited to building miniature copies of the works of others.

 <edit: sarcastic comment removed>

  Give it a break, Harry. Go visit an art gallery instead of trying to bait people.

 Grin,
 Stein

 

Oh be nice.

- Harry

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Posted by CNJ831 on Saturday, December 6, 2008 7:43 AM

It should be pointed out that John's modeling of the G&D was simply an extavagant "style", not some extraordinarily new art form or concept within the hobby and in my opinion could be seen as an evolving extrapolation from some other existing layouts of the period. However, John admittedly took these ideas to creative extremes that exceeded most of those others. In large part, readers opinions presented here have been based on what they've seen of the G&D in the literature of recent years and fails to consider other material appearing in older copies MR's and RMC's. Thus, many posters don't really appreciate the sort of modeling being done by some others at the time that may have influenced John himself. John's overall modeling style is today probably best classified as caricature, which one saw as distinctly more commonplace during the earliest period of the G&D than subsequently. This makes John no less of an outstanding modeler, nor less looked upon as a very creative mind in the hobby's early history but it does indicate that John modeling was not absolutely unique.

Likewise, it should be noted that John's "style" of modeling was never one that was truly universally appealing and thus the complaints one occasionally saw in MR's Letters to the Editor regarding "too much G&D" in its pages. Nor has John's G&D style of modeling been widely reproduced in other layouts since (Sellios and Furlow seemingly being its main proponents seen in the magazines in recent years), which tends to put the G&D's actual longterm influence on the hobby/hobbyists somewhat in question in my book. Even well before John's untimely death, the sort of modeling style presented on the G&D had long since given way to a more strict conformity to realism. This is in no way to be taken as critical of John's work, nor does it take anything away from the G&D's incredible visual impact, then or now. However, while the G&D has certainly been considered as visually amazing to virtually all of us, past and present, it has not resulted in many hobbyists ever being willing to incorporate it's style into their own layouts. 

CNJ831   

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Posted by steinjr on Saturday, December 6, 2008 3:15 AM

HarryHotspur
And of course the same thing applies to model railroading. Some MRRs have the outstanding vision and talent to create original works which are pleasing to the great majority of viewers. Others lack this talent, and are thus limited to building miniature copies of the works of others.

 <edit: sarcastic comment removed>

  Give it a break, Harry. Go visit an art gallery instead of trying to bait people.

 Grin,
 Stein

 

 

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Posted by HarryHotspur on Saturday, December 6, 2008 2:30 AM

Midnight Railroader

HarryHotspur
People who fail to recognize and appreciate the brilliance of the work of Allen, Furlow, etc. are simply jealous because they lack that ability

No, That implies that if you think something is art, we must all agree, or we're wrong.

Just because you think their work was great, doesn't make it universally or objectively true.

 

Sorry, I failed to state my point clearly, so I'll try again.

I am simply making the distinction between an original work and a copy. Whether it's called "art" or not is a matter of semantics and is irrelevant to my point. One who creates something original has a vision and talent. Whether the object created is good or bad is always a matter or opinion. For example, I cannot appreciate the works of Picasso, but I do not deny that his work was original and creative and that he has a vision not previously displayed by others.

But even though I cannot appreciate Picasso's work, it is an indisputable fact Picasso deserves more recognition than those who simply produced copies of his work.  The same is true of any human creation. For example I might be able to build an outstanding scale model of one of Frank Lloyd Wright's buildings, but it's still just a copy, and the fact that I cannot produce an original work as good as his means that I lack the talent he had.

And of course the same thing applies to model railroading. Some MRRs have the outstanding vision and talent to create original works which are pleasing to the great majority of viewers. Others lack this talent, and are thus limited to building miniature copies of the works of others.

- Harry

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Posted by twhite on Friday, December 5, 2008 8:46 PM

citylimits

twhite

dehusman

Naw let the 400 ft sheer drops that filled half the room, the sky hook lifts to stations and multiple bridges over the same canyon do that for ya.

Actually, John Allen modeled the West, where 400 foot sheer drops are relatively common on railroads out here.  If you've ever been over the SP (now UP) Donner Pass line, there are several places where the railroad skirts not only 400 foot sheer drops, but a couple of 2,000 foot ones.  He just modeled the type of country that he was used to out here, IMO. 

Tom

 

I've just had a thought of what I think might be a rewarding model railroad subject - Cannery Row. Infleuced by another of California's great sons, John Steinbeck. So many wonderful scenic and reseach opportunities. Main-line and switching possibilites and period features. Lots of scratchbuilding and or kit bashing - authentic or fantasy. The prospects are becoming way too exciting for this old mans heart to take. I'm getting a buzz for the possibilities bouncing about in my head and my creative juices are flowing - oop's, time for a mug of java and a good lay-down

Cheers

Bruce

Bruce--

GREAT idea!  Actually, I'm surprised that nobody (at least that I know of) hasn't modeled that SP branch through Monterey and along the coast down through Asilomar and Del Monte.  You can walk the branch through Cannery Row--it's a pedestrian/bike trail and along the coast, and you're right, it's got tons of character.  Just like Steinbeck's wonderful novel (which happens to be my all-time favorite book!). 

Tom Big Smile

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Posted by citylimits on Friday, December 5, 2008 7:13 PM

twhite

dehusman

Naw let the 400 ft sheer drops that filled half the room, the sky hook lifts to stations and multiple bridges over the same canyon do that for ya.

Actually, John Allen modeled the West, where 400 foot sheer drops are relatively common on railroads out here.  If you've ever been over the SP (now UP) Donner Pass line, there are several places where the railroad skirts not only 400 foot sheer drops, but a couple of 2,000 foot ones.  He just modeled the type of country that he was used to out here, IMO. 

Tom

 

I've just had a thought of what I think might be a rewarding model railroad subject - Cannery Row. Infleuced by another of California's great sons, John Steinbeck. So many wonderful scenic and reseach opportunities. Main-line and switching possibilites and period features. Lots of scratchbuilding and or kit bashing - authentic or fantasy. The prospects are becoming way too exciting for this old mans heart to take. I'm getting a buzz for the possibilities bouncing about in my head and my creative juices are flowing - oop's, time for a mug of java and a good lay-down

Cheers

Bruce

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Posted by jguess733 on Friday, December 5, 2008 6:33 PM
dehusman

Naw let the 400 ft sheer drops that filled half the room, the sky hook lifts to stations and multiple bridges over the same canyon do that for ya.

The skyhook took passengers from a station to a hotel at the top of a mountain, that was built to disguise a support post.

Jason

Modeling the Fort Worth & Denver of the early 1970's in N scale

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Posted by twhite on Friday, December 5, 2008 6:28 PM

dehusman

Naw let the 400 ft sheer drops that filled half the room, the sky hook lifts to stations and multiple bridges over the same canyon do that for ya.

Actually, John Allen modeled the West, where 400 foot sheer drops are relatively common on railroads out here.  If you've ever been over the SP (now UP) Donner Pass line, there are several places where the railroad skirts not only 400 foot sheer drops, but a couple of 2,000 foot ones.  He just modeled the type of country that he was used to out here, IMO. 

Tom

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Posted by dehusman on Friday, December 5, 2008 6:01 PM

wjstix
Just because John took a few pics of a brontosaurus on his layout, or posed some figures in the act of lynching a diesel locomotive salesman as a joke for some friends when they came over, don't assume that his layout was just a series of Disneyland scenes and make-believe jokes.

Naw let the 400 ft sheer drops that filled half the room, the sky hook lifts to stations and multiple bridges over the same canyon do that for ya.

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by Midnight Railroader on Friday, December 5, 2008 5:30 PM

betamax
Brace yourselves. Another box from Allen's house has been found to contain reams of documents written by Allen himself, discussing various topics such as data sheets, operations etc. From his round-robin mailings of the 1960s. We may learn even more about the man and his influence. There are even some photographs.

Source?

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