Here's mine, which I built from cereal box cardboard when I was still in elementary school.
http://vanderheide.ca/blog/2014/12/15/first-scratchbuild/
Chris van der Heide
My Algoma Central Railway Modeling Blog
Wow, great viaduct!
My first scratch-built structures were built when I was a teenager, back when dinosaurs roamed the earth. They "near N" scale -- I didn't have a scale ruler so I made them to 1/16" to the foot. I don't remember exactly which one was built first, but I think it was coal mine and tipple. There was also a Victorian house, and maybe one or two others.
As my skills improved I moved on to 1/8" scale, and eventually got a scale ruler and started building in HO scale. All of these structures were on small dioramas, since I had no room or money for a model railroad. At some point, being a teenager, I decided to eliminate my early works by stuffing firecrackers into them. :)
Tom,
What photo hosting site are you using? That will help with guidance on the specific hosting service you use.
Generally, the hosting site will automatically generate several different links. There's oftne one called "forum code" or something similar which is the first thing to try. However, if that doesn't work, try the other until you find the one that works here. For instancde, I use ImageShack and neither the "forum" or "alt" forum codes work IIRC, which is why I use the "direct" code here.
To place the image in your posting here, you should see a series of options on top of the "Post Body" entry form. Mine has three rows of toolbars. You want the middle group of three in the third (bottom) toolbar. Click on the small pic of the mountain and star and you will get a pop-up box to enter your pic code from the pic hosting website. Paste the code in, hit OK, and after a moment the pics should appear wherever your cursor is sitting in the "Post Body" form. Remember that you may need to "allow pop-ups" if your browser setting have been set to prevent them in order to get the pop-up pic posting form.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
I've got pictures of mine, but, as usual I'm having trouble posting pictures on this forum. All of the instructions I've been given just don't jive. When I follow them, the menus, icons, etc. don't appear as described in the instructions. What pictures I have posted have mostly been via cut and paste, but they come out distorted (help!!)
Anyway, my first effort was a fairly complex (for a first effort) grain elevator/feed mill, complete with silos. Sure wish I could show it here. Very frustrating!!
mlehmanHeck, Bear's is even quite impressive
mlehmanPeople should give scratchbuilding a try if they've been wondering about their capabilities. More than likely, it will have a few flaws, but the good will surely outweigh the bad. Then the next project will build on the first and so on and so forth. You'll gain confidence and skills as you go and look forward to solving the challenge each new projecft brings.
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
Dennis:
That looks good. What did you use for the corregated roof?
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
John:
Lots of good work on your blog. I can definately see an improvement in your scratchbuilding skills as you progressed.
I'm at the same point re having built almost all of the structures that I need for my layout. However, having seen the quality of work done by others on the forum, I am tempted to re-do a few of them that I didn't put quite enough thought into originally.
My first totally scratchbuilt structure........yard office for my RR.
Dennis Blank Jr.
CEO,COO,CFO,CMO,Bossman,Slavedriver,Engineer,Trackforeman,Grunt. Birdsboro & Reading Railroad
Nice work, everyone. It's really pretty interesting that so many first efforts came out so presentable. Heck, Bear's is even quite impressive!
ACYI had fun. I was around 11 years old, I think. You learn by doing, and that was a learning experience.
Exactly. I'm sure it was a satisfying experience for you, even if there aren't any surviving pics.
People should give scratchbuilding a try if they've been wondering about their capabilities. More than likely, it will have a few flaws, but the good will surely outweigh the bad. Then the next project will build on the first and so on and so forth. You'll gain confidence and skills as you go and look forward to solving the challenge each new projecft brings.
This is my first scratchbuild (I think). It is built from pine slabs cut on my radial arm saw. I didn't sand the slabs well enough so there are some saw marks. The ice chutes are too high in the wall as well, but that I will correct once I know the elevation of the track in front:
Mine is long gone, the victim of many moves over the years. It was a freelance interlocking tower inspired by an MR plan in the 1950's. The material was rough cardstock, and I think there may have been more glue & paint than cardboard in the final product. But I had fun. I was around 11 years old, I think. You learn by doing, and that was a learning experience.
Tom
This is the earliest scratch built structure I have a photo for. It was made from some thin pressed board, clear document protectors and white glue. It was located where my cow pasture and windmill are now. It was lighted and didn't look too bad in the dark.
Saugatuck Station.
It stayed on the layout for
Remember its your railroad
Allan
Track to the BRVRR Website: http://www.brvrr.com/
I started small, a simple loading dock:
Paul
Modeling HO with a transition era UP bent
This was my first scratchbuild, a station that now serves in Hesperus. I built it from a planbook (will try to locate) when I was living in Germany as an AF brat. It's also the only model I've ever entered in a contest, where it won 1st place in the youth structure division IIRC at a meet in Frankfurt. So far, that seems to have satisfied any need for contesting, but certainly not scratchbuilding.
The front
The back
The battens are all hand cut and applied, windows and doors all scratched. I think the only manufactured parts were the pinheads used for doorknobs.
EDIT: OK, located the plan. It's from an aticle by Joe Wilhelm called "Sammll Town Station" that was the first plan included in the classic "Easy to Build Model Railroad Structures" edited by Willard V. Anderson of MR. It originally appeared in "Model Trains." The planbook was first published in 1958 and mine is the 4th printing with the price of $1.
Looking through it, I see another structure I still have, a wedge shaped warehouse, which is the Crooke's hardware warehouse in Silverton now. It's the warehouse behind the brown Rio Grande RBL in the middle right side of the pic.
I remember building the station first, now. It's possible I built the warehouse first, because it's simpler and my memory isn't trustyworthy that far back. So I've got it covered anyway, one or the other is first.
Great idea for a thread.
The first one in my MRR reincarnation was this bridge. I wanted a girder bridge to span a large cut where the track was curved. No one had one on the market so I built my own.
My first thought was, a girder bridge would never be that long unsupported. I then started going to prototype RR engineering sites and discovered the longest unsupported girder bridge built was a 172' long. They had pic's and I was off to the races, knowing something similar and longer than mine did exist in real life.
How the curve was dealt with.
Had to add fake rivets.
Test fitting on the layout.
Brent
"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."
What was your first scratchbuilt structure? This was mine, made many years ago. It's pretty basic, and isn't being used on my present layout. But I can't bring myself to throw it away, either.
I've posted some thoughts about scratchbuilding and kitbashing on my blog, together with other photos of first-time and current efforts.
http://cprailmmsub.blogspot.ca/2014/12/scatchbuilding-and-kitbashing-on-m-m-sub.html
John Longhurst, Winnipeg