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Freelancing For Today's Model Railroader

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Freelancing For Today's Model Railroader
Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, May 4, 2020 8:05 AM

I decided to start a new thread for this topic. Big Daddy made this response in a different thread about Testors paints:

BigDaddy
The freelanced railroad is a distant memory. If the freelancers still exist in any number, how many bottles of Milwaukee Road orange or C&O blue are they going to buy?

Please, I do not want this to become a talk about "Real" model railroaders, or anything like that. I want to talk about freelancing today and how it compare to yesterday.

I am a freelancer...period. I am not a proto-lancer, free-reality, or reality-inspired model railroader. The STRATTON AND GILLETTE is fake. It exists in fake region, in a fake world, where it interchanges with other fake railroads, and the whole thing should have a pseudo-fantasy feel when it is complete.

I make no statements for where the SGRR is, or even if it is in the United States.

The only thing we know for sure about the SGRR is that it only exists on Tuesday, August 3rd, 1954, at 2:00 in the afternoon.

So that is my railroad, it is mine, it is what it is.

I created the SGRR over 35 years ago when I was in High School. At that time, freelancers were common. With so many of us, we could get what we needed.

You need four things to successfully build a freelance railroad:

1) Custom decals or lettering.

2) Undecorated models.

3) Appropriate paint.

4) An open mind towards fantasy.

It seems that all four are becoming in shorter supply.

1) Rail Graphics and Don Manlick are gone. There are other small options out there, but they all lack the buyer-friendly interface the RG and DM had. Back in the day, you could fill out a simple form, send a check for $30.00 or so, and in a few weeks you would have decals for your railroad. You did not need any creative skill or anything, just an idea. The entry into a freelanced roadname is not so easy now.

2) Undecorated models are becoming quite rare. Accurail is the best option for now, but if you want next-level detail they will require more work. Getting a new DCC/Sound locomotive undecorated is nearly impossible. There are ways around this, but like the decals, it is getting more complicated.

3) There are still good options for paint (Scalecoat 2), but the selection is thinning.

4) The Model Railroad community is very much about realism right now. I do not see a lot of inspiration for the newbie with an idea for his own railroad often.

So.... If I decided to start the SGRR right now, I would have a much harder time.

I have all the locomotives, freight cars, paints, and decals I will ever need. As such, manufacturers would be foolish to manufacture for me.

For the older freelance modelers like me... would you do it today of you had to start over... I would not.

For the younger modelers... Would you even consider a freelanced model railroad with the limitations of today's market?

For the guys building freelanced railroads... How do you get the supplies you need?

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Doughless on Monday, May 4, 2020 8:58 AM

I guess it depends on how deeply you go into the free lance world. 

My free lanced short line uses locos with patched out lettering and numbering. A little sanding or scraping, acrylic touch up paint mixed to match or even slightly off to get the typical patched look, and minimal decals.

If I paint the entire loco, it just a single color dip paint scheme with block lettering.  Krylon rattle can and block letter decals and I'm good.  I don't have free lanced rolling stock.

- Douglas

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Posted by UNCLEBUTCH on Monday, May 4, 2020 9:18 AM

Doughless
My free lanced short line uses locos with patched out lettering and numbering. A little sanding or scraping, acrylic touch up paint

  I don't even go that far. Fact is ;I don't have a name for my RR. I run trains just for the fun of it.

So am I a ''sub'' free lancer ?  Or don't I count at all?

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Posted by York1 on Monday, May 4, 2020 9:26 AM

Since I'm still new to the hobby, I bought what I knew from my area -- BNSF and UP.

However, after reading the Forum for a while and seeing pictures on the Weekend Photos, I'm considering a small attempt at some free-lancing.

I've been going over and over thinking about a name and symbol.

I'm a big 1950s science fiction fan, and I've considered trying a name that connects with that.

I don't know.  This is all just thinking right now.  I'm pretty lazy in retirement, and it may be more work than I'm willing to do.

York1 John       

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, May 4, 2020 9:41 AM

As a free-lancer myself, I use Tamiya spray can paint (which has a finer nozzle / spray than most 'big box' store paints) as my railroad's colors. Red-Brown for freight cars, Bright Red for cabooses, Olive Drab for heavyweight passenger cars, and two shades of blue for diesels and lightweight passenger cars.

I agree about decals. I still have a fair number of Don Manlick decals, but haven't found anyone to make new ones. I gave some DM decals to the folks at San Juan Model Co. at the Nat'l Narrow Gauge convention in 2018 to see if they could do the custom decals for me, still waiting to hear back from them!

Stix
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Posted by John-NYBW on Monday, May 4, 2020 9:41 AM

SeeYou190

You need four things to successfully build a freelance railroad:

 

1) Custom decals or lettering.

 

2) Undecorated models.

 

3) Appropriate paint.

 

4) An open mind towards fantasy.

 

 

It seems that all four are becoming in shorter supply.

 

 

I'll address each of these points.

1. I make my own decals. So far I've only done so on a limited basis due to other projects but I've finally gotten everything I need to do my entire loco and rolling stock fleet and I expect to have everything lettered for my road within a couple weeks. 

2. I'm not obsessed with fine detail so this doesn't really apply to me. It's also not necessary to get undecorated models. I can simply repaint over ones painted for another road. I've done this with boxcars from a previous layout that weren't appropriate for either my current time frame or local. My current railroad has an eastern locale and my old fleet had far too many western roads in it to seem plausible. They've been repainted and are now awaiting decaling. Quite a while ago I did order some undecorated Athearn and Bowser boxcars. The Bowsers were painted and already had the data portion so all I need to do with those is add my roadname decaling an numbers. I also just purchased data only water slide decals but it looks like it is going to be a bit of a challenge. The tiny white lettering against a light blue background is almost impossible for my aging eyes to make out so cutting them is not going to be easy. 

3. I can paint my fleet any color that looks right to me. It took me a while but I finally found shades of boxcar red and pullman green in rattle cans that looked right to me. 

4. While my railroad is a fantasy, I want to make it seem as plausible as possible. I don't want to take an anything goes approach. I might cut a few corners, but for the most part I want it to seem as if the railroad could have existed. My freelanced railroad models fictional towns but the staging yards represent interchanges with real places and railroads. In addition, the NYC, Pennsy, and Erie have trackage rights on portions of my road so their equipment will make an appearance. 

 

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Posted by dstarr on Monday, May 4, 2020 11:22 AM

Freelancing.  It's fun if you can think up a good "legend" for your road, and perhaps a time period (do you want to run steam or not?) And a name that catches your fancy.  And some good names for cities and towns, important industries, rivers, lakes, etc.  And you want to enjoy painting and lettering and decaling.  Freight trains only need home road (your free lance road) name on locomotives and cabeese and a couple of freight cars.  The rest of the cars can be interchange cars from any factory painted prototype road that strikes your fancy.  Passenger trains can have a lot of Pullmans and other prepainted road sleepers  and baggage, but you ought to letter the coaches for your home road. 

 

Custom Decals:  I read (I haven't tried it yet) that you can make your own decals on your computer and print them onto special decal paper on an ordinary ink jet printer.  One hangup, inkjet printers don't print white.  I lettered my freelance cars with ordinary 1/8 inch alphabet decals or rub on transfer alphabets.  Plenty of roads just lettered the road name on the sides of their cars, they didn't bother with graphic heralds except on locomotives, and often not even them.

You don't need undecorated models.  You can strip the paint off a prepainted model shell.  Just soak it in 91% alcohol for some hours, maybe over night and the factory paint will come right off with a little scrubbing from an old tooth brush.  You may be able to find a good paint match and paint over car numbers and road names and the patch over doesn't show.  I did this on a set of BB GP38's.  My Floquil B&M blue matched the Athearn factory B&M blue perfectly. 

Rattle cans.  I am conserving my stash of Floquil by using rattle cans as much as possible.  Krylon and Rustoleum red auto primer makes a fine box car red, a good color for freight car trucks, and a fine brick red.  The dark gray auto primer is good on steam locomotives, canvas roofs on wood passenger, cabeese, and milk cars, and the under carriage of rolling stock. The light gray is good for covered hoppers and rolling stock undercarriage. The plain gloss red works for passenger maroon with a top coat of DullCote.  The olive drab makes a good Pullman green.

   I have heard of some fairly way out free lances.  There was one that served the Mines of Moria and had orcs for trainmen.  There was a Luna City RR that ran in vacuum on the surface of the moon.  The diesel locomotives had huge tenders carrying tanks of compressed air for the engines. 

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Posted by Trainman440 on Monday, May 4, 2020 11:43 AM

Call me wrong and a pessimist, but the current generation of modelers are more and more verging on the "pay more, run RTR, no tinkering" type. Ive been finding more and more expensive engines that just have a broken wire, a backwards wheel(causing short), and forgotten decoder address on ebay, selling for 1/2 the price. Really simple issues that every modeler will encounter, and should know how to fix. Yet they dont. Car and engine kits are long gone, replaced with the newest ready to run, with sound and smoke. If so much as a little detail is bent, or a scratch in the paint, some customers will complain. 

Now Im aware that theres many knowledgable modelers out there, and kits on ebay and train shows are everywhere, but seeing the transistion to RTR is pretty clear, I dont see the demand for undec engines, paint, and custom decals(or even brass detail parts) increasing anytime soon. 

Its a shame, and maybe not true, but in my eyes, it seems so. 

On the plus side, that's just more engines on Ebay for me! 

Charles

 

PS personally, I would like to model a freelanced railroad, but my skills on painting and detailing are dreadful as of the moment. However, Im working on improving them, especially during the coronvirus summer break, now that I got time. Maybe Ill go freelance one day!

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Modeling the PRR & NYC in HO

Youtube Channel: www.youtube.com/@trainman440

Instagram (where I share projects!): https://www.instagram.com/trainman440

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Posted by Water Level Route on Monday, May 4, 2020 11:45 AM

SeeYou190
For the older freelance modelers like me... would you do it today of you had to start over... I would not.

This was the same boat I found myself in a few years back when the opportunity came to actively re-enter the hobby.  My move from the armchair to the basement had always been planned to be a freelanced line connected to and probably owned by the NYC, as I always liked the NYC.  When I had last been actively modeling, undecorated locos and rolling stock wasn't that hard to come by.  When I returned I realized that had all changed without me noticing.  My layout now is a freelanced NYC branch.

Mike

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Posted by BigDaddy on Monday, May 4, 2020 11:48 AM

I'm like Kevin, I have what I need for the rest of my life in terms of decals from Rail Graphics.

I would pass on a new freelanced railroad today, but not for lack of fantasies, of which I have many.

I don't want to be exposed to any more solvent paints.  If people wore solvent badges like radiologists wore xray badges to measure exposure.  I would be prohibited anyway. 

The detail in modern loco is enormous, windshield wipers, window trim.  I do not have the skills to do the extremely detailed painting or removing and painting tiny details.  You can watch youtube reviews of various new locos, and the reviewer can hardly get it out of the box without finding loose parts or breaking something.

Henry

COB Potomac & Northern

Shenandoah Valley

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Monday, May 4, 2020 12:23 PM

BigDaddy
The detail in modern loco is enormous, windshield wipers, window trim. I do not have the skills to do the extremely detailed painting or removing and painting tiny details.

This is the crux of it. Are you willing to accept what you yourself can do even when it's not as good as RTR.  Granted over time your skills may improve, but are you willling to put in the time?  In the meantime will you be happy with what you can do?

And if you are building a layout larger than say 10x10, do you have the time?  My current under construction layout is 13x36, I use as much RTR as is available.  Loosely following the Ma&Pa RR is faster than modeling a free lance railroad.

Paul

If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.
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Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, May 4, 2020 12:39 PM

dstarr
And some good names for cities and towns

I have posted the story of where the names "Stratton" and "Gillette"came from before.

On the layout, six cities are represented, only two are actually on the layout.

Centerville: Biggest city on the layout, from an epsiode of the Twilight Zone.

Port Annabel: Name inspired by John Allen.

East staging goes to Great Divide, also inspired by John Allen.

West staging goes to Manchester, inspred by George Sellios.

I have not settled on names for the cities for staging to the North and South yet. I might not. Since these are double tracked mainlines, it can be assumed that several cities are along that route.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Wolf359 on Monday, May 4, 2020 1:13 PM

I am most definitely a freelancer. As I have locomotives and rollingstock from multiple eras and road names, (and would not give any of them up for the world), the idea behind both my temporary dining room table layout and future layout plans is something along the lines of the ultimate railroad museum. I like watching trains run, and I like the wide variety of locomotives and equipment out there. I even have some British equipment. (Hogwarts Express) If I had to start over, I wouldn't change a thing except for doing a few things better with skills I learned later on. As for the supplies I need/use, it's anything and everything that is suitable, and usually obtained locally. Also, just for the record, I'm a younger modeler at the age of 29.

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, May 4, 2020 1:20 PM

I think it is amazing that the decals, paint, and undecorated car kits all had to come from different sources. These companies all had an interconnected existence.

Now that freelancing is unpopular, there is little chance that it will be able to come back. Why would someone start making decals if modelers cannot get a good supply of undecorated kits? Why make undecorated kits if no one is going to decorate them?

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Lazers on Monday, May 4, 2020 1:20 PM

Hi Kevin, Interesting Topic. Possibly a good, inspiring example of a Free-lance Model RR would be Eric Brooman's 'Utah Belt' HO scale model? There are instances (on another Forum) where subscribers have asked, "where is the prototype UB R/R", because they can't find it on Google. Proving it aint what you do, its the way that.... but also proof that Freelance MRRs are not to be relegated.

I did consider free-lancing, but the CSS&SB Freight is my first USA MRR and I don't know enough about the Country let alone its Railroads and how they operate and so chose a prototype.

But had I wanted to freelance, I would have done it. Nothing or nobody would have stopped me. Certainly not Paints or Decals. You get a lot more Modeller's Licence, for one thing. It might be easier modelling a Free-lance? Hence;

Luckily, I found "Switchline Decals" (online) who produced and mailed to me, the full range of CSS&SB GP38's. I will use whatever Tamiya 'near enough' Orange, that I can get my hands on, here in the UK. That's after I have stripped the Yellow & Blue Livery from my Santa-Fe GP38's. Seems a bit like the Free-lancing Obstacle-course of today - I can't compare with the past?

Of course, I could buy some of Atlas's recent CSS&SB GP38's, but I would have to import them, at great expense.

Freight & Passenger Cars, I modify, detail & repaint mostly old (cheap) models/kits from ebay-uk or Model Railway Exhibitions. Again, anything I can get my hands on, that is applicable and/or offers potential.

The standard of modelling in the photos you submit to the community shows me that you have no problem with acheiving good results. It's not all or just - down to the quality of the Paints & Decals you are using-up, from your old supplies.

Eric Brooman constanly updates his Loco & Stock portfolio and along with the inspiring 'Utah Belt', he just gets on with it and does it. Trees that have died, new that have grown - and all in between. Regards, Paul

"It's the South Shore Line, Jim - but not as we know it".

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, May 4, 2020 1:25 PM

Lazers
Eric Brooman constanly updates his Loco & Stock portfolio and along with the inspiring 'Utah Belt', he just gets on with it and does it. Trees that have died, new that have grown - and all in between. Regards, Paul

Eric Boorman's layout is a work of art. I used to think the scenery was fanciful, but when I drove through Utah last year I found out it is completely realistic.

I have the 1954 UTAH BELT represented in my fleet of freight cars.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Wolf359 on Monday, May 4, 2020 1:37 PM

SeeYou190

Why would someone start making decals if modelers cannot get a good supply of undecorated kits? Why make undecorated kits if no one is going to decorate them?

-Kevin

 

I don't think that would necessarily be a deterrent to someone who really wants to model a given locomotive or car. I've been trying to cobble together a small fleet of Colorado Midland Railway locos, and when I find suitable candidate loco it doesn't really matter to me if it's undecorated or not. I just paint it and make my own decals. I'd say it just depends on one's modeling skills and how much effort they wnat to put into it.

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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Monday, May 4, 2020 2:19 PM

I proto-freelance, in that I have a fictional route, that interchanges with multiple real lines, with trackage rights for a couple of those lines as well.

My route has very little of their own equipment, just a couple of locomotives, and a handful of used MOW cars and equipment. Locomotives will be a single color paint with decal striping and block lettering. (Microscale makes these, as do others.) MOW will just be patch job ballast hoppers, and a patched caboose as a shoving platform. (And the CMX and centerline track cleaners.)

Everything else is real lines equipment.

So, it's easy to proto-freelance a line, even with the modern selection.

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Monday, May 4, 2020 2:34 PM

I have some freelance companies on my railroad, complete with rolling stock and sometimes even vehicles.  I named the small railroad that services the carfloat area the Westport Terminal Railroad, after the layout of one of our late forum members, Wolfgang Dudler.

My layout mostly runs Milwaukee equipment, but I do like a few fantasy items to tie the structures to the trains a bit better.  For these, I use either undecorated cars or rattle can spray over something cheap like an Athearn BB ice bunker reefer.  I print my own decals on my computer.

My trolley and buses are decorated for my Moose Bay Transit Authority, again, starting with an undecorated kit, painting with rattle can paint and decaling done on my computer.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by doctorwayne on Monday, May 4, 2020 4:16 PM

wjstix
I agree about decals. I still have a fair number of Don Manlick decals, but haven't found anyone to make new ones. I gave some DM decals to the folks at San Juan Model Co. at the Nat'l Narrow Gauge convention in 2018 to see if they could do the custom decals for me, still waiting to hear back from them!

I've had three 50 sheet custom dry transfer sets from C-D-S, and two custom decal sets, 25 sheets each, from Rail Graphics.  One of the latter was a tribute to a fellow model railroader and friend who had passed away, and I sold most of those sets (at cost) to other modellers wanting to honour him. 
However, I friend sent me several decal sheets of lettering for a shortline railroad, of which he had been Manager before his retirement.  Here's a car, not yet weathered, lettered with those decals...

I thought the yellow lettering to be very vibrant (many yellow decals can be rather washed-out-looking), but when I looked at the lettering under magnification, using a jewller's loupe, there appeared to be very small dots of red in it.  I contacted the maker, Circus City Decals, asking them about the red dots, and in particular, asking if they contribute to the vibrancy.
I was surprised by a very prompt reply, apologising for the dots, and adding that they were not supposed to be there....the dots were actually magenta, and otherwise unnoticeable.  I was offered replacement sets, at no cost, but quickly responded, letting them know that a friend had ordered the decals, and merely gave me a couple of sets, so any replacements should go to him.

I am sharing this information, mainly to emphasise that not only are the decals very well-done, but that Circus City definitely stands behind their products.

Here's a LINK to their website.

When I need more custom decals, I'll definitely order them from Circus City - if you're capable, provide your own artwork, otherwise they'll do it for you, for a price, of course.
All of my custom decals were designed by me, but my brother, who has the proper computer programmes, did all of the art work.

Wayne

 

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Posted by sandjam on Monday, May 4, 2020 4:39 PM

SeeYou190
Now that freelancing is unpopular, there is little chance that it will be able to come back. Why would someone start making decals if modelers cannot get a good supply of undecorated kits? Why make undecorated kits if no one is going to decorate them?

Nobody has to “start” making decals, plenty of companies already do.
I can and do make my own. Most all freelancers I know do.
Several manufacturers still offer unpainted models.
And if there is something I want, I can always buy a model of a particular car body type and strip it.
What is your source for “freelance is unpopular”? What statistics do you have that it is in decline?
I don’t see a change, other than the hobby as a whole is dying.
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Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, May 4, 2020 4:56 PM

sandjam
What is your source for “freelance is unpopular”?

Reality is my source.

I am comparing this to the hey-day of private roadnames in the 60s through the 80s. Then the shift was made to prototype railroad modelling as more detailed road-specific models became available.

This does not need to be debated, freelance modeling is a mere fraction.

By the way, the hobby as whole is not dying, it is just changing.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by jjdamnit on Monday, May 4, 2020 5:05 PM

Hello All,

I freelance.

This was the plan from the start.

My pike is a fictional branch to a coal mine set in the coal fields of the Western Slope of Colorado during the 1970s to 1980s.

This railroad is owned by the parent company, Consolidated Materials Group.

The Nation Model Railroad Association (NMRA) registered name is:

"BS&P (Buckskin & Platte Rail Road) Coal Brick Loop - C.M.G.; Reporting Marks: BS&P R.R."

The coal drags from the mainline and materials trains are Santa Fe.

Mine trains are leased from D&RGW.

All the motive power owned by the BS&P is repatched. The livery colors are black with safety orange stripes. 

This makes changing paint schemes easy.

Even if I can't completely strip the original paint, the black rattle-can paint pretty much masks a lot.

I have not yet printed the decals for the herald (my avatar).

The next step will be to print out and apply the decals.

For me, part of the draw of modeling is the ability "what if" in any way you wish.

Hope this helps.

"Uhh...I didn’t know it was 'impossible' I just made it work...sorry"

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Posted by doctorwayne on Monday, May 4, 2020 5:08 PM

ricktrains4824
I proto-freelance, in that I have a fictional route, that interchanges with multiple real lines, with trackage rights for a couple of those lines as well....

My layout is pretty-much the same, with four freelanced railroads, mostly represented only by their locomotives and cabooses, with little rolling stock of their own. 
Three of the roads are controlled by a fourth, the Elora Gorge & Eastern, my first freelanced road (which is itself, not modelled, although there are a lot of EG&E freight and passenger cars on the layout, along with only a couple of EG&E locomotives).
Two of my modelled freelanced roads have their own track, while the third owns one locomotive and one caboose.  It was originally intended to be a switching and transfer company, but if I can correct a couple of minor problems (cab and tender interference on curves), I may just get rid of them.

My layout has eight towns, all named for real ones, but none of them as representations of their prototypes, and many industries named for real ones, but likewise pretty-much freelanced.  Some are named for friends, too, but totally freelanced (but I hope that they look convincing enough to have been based on real ones).

Both of the modelled railroads interchange with the real railroads which ran in my hometown, and they include the CPR, TH&B, NYC, and CNR.  Other than the first one, all are (or will be) represented by locomotives on my layout.

As for interchange cars, I have hundreds, very similar to what I saw as a child, growing up in a heavily industrialised city, with cars from literally everywhere in North America.

I'm pretty fussy about a lot of those interchange cars (not all of 'em, though), as I model them after real ones shown in photos, so I have lots of reference books to aid in getting the details right.

I do buy mostly kits (I believe that I have only two or three r-t-r cars on the layout) and mostly letter my own.
Most of the locomotives (steam now, but I had dozens of diesels at one time) were both kits and r-t-r, but all were modified in some way, and all custom painted and lettered.  I have one on my to-do list that will be pretty-much scratchbuilt, though.

Many of my cars were bought "used", either at train shows or hobbyshops which offered previously-owned stuff, and there's not much that makes it onto the layout without some changes - details, paint, lettering, or modification, both minor and major.

For my freelanced rolling stock, I have specific paint schemes and lettering, and try to make them as believeable-looking as the stuff representing real cars.

SeeYou190
For the older freelance modelers like me... would you do it today of you had to start over... I would not.

Definitely!  I like the idea of replicating, to some degree, the prototype, but also enjoy the ability to use my imagination.

Wayne

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Posted by sandjam on Monday, May 4, 2020 6:23 PM
Freelance has always been “a mere fraction of the hobby”.
My question stands, how are you measuring a fraction of a fraction, and seeing that in decline without seeing the hobby as a whole in decline, merely “changing?”
Yes, the hobby is changing, mostly because there are less consumer participants, and the manufacturers have found their selective niches to stay profitable to their limited consumers.
If in fact, the whole of the hobby is “changing” then wouldn’t that in turn imply that the freelanced portion of the hobby is “changing” as well?
Adapting to the availability of decals, kits, paints, etc., is nothing new. It has been that way since the beginning of the hobby, and I would suspect it will remain so. We will carry on.
Your reality is your perception. Not all see it your way.
That doesn’t make any of us right or wrong, it just makes us different in our views.
I don’t perceive an issue, unless you are trying to create one, and still not an issue to us freelancers.
We are going to do what we always have.
Would I do it again?
**** yes.
Still unsure of the point of the thread.
Seinfeld show?
  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Flyover Country
  • 5,557 posts
Posted by York1 on Monday, May 4, 2020 7:39 PM

sandjam
Still unsure of the point of the thread.

 

The point of this thread is to talk about freelancing in the model railroad hobby.  We enjoy talking about it.  That's why we come to this site.

 

sandjam
I don’t perceive an issue, unless you are trying to create one

 

What issue are you trying to create?

York1 John       

  • Member since
    February 2020
  • 52 posts
Posted by sandjam on Monday, May 4, 2020 8:06 PM

York1
What issue are you trying to create?

Not trying to create anything I am not the OP.

Comprehension is a plus, go back and read my reply again.
  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Flyover Country
  • 5,557 posts
Posted by York1 on Monday, May 4, 2020 8:14 PM

For those of you who created a logo for your railroad's name, did you design it yourself?  I see that one decal company will design one for a price.  Has anyone tried that?

York1 John       

  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Flyover Country
  • 5,557 posts
Posted by York1 on Monday, May 4, 2020 8:17 PM

sandjam
Comprehension is a plus, go back and read my reply again.

Thanks for the suggestion!

Have a nice rest of the day.

York1 John       

  • Member since
    October 2001
  • From: OH
  • 17,574 posts
Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, May 4, 2020 9:04 PM

While I have modeled the NYC,PRR and C&O I have far more years freelancing my own railroad(s).

My Slate Creek Rail has nothing more then SCR under the number on the cab. Of course my Summerset Ry SW1500 came lettered for that road. My Huron River was made with  Champ decal's  private name decals. My Columbus & Hocking Valley features custom made decals.

As a side note my second SSRy SW1500 will be in the new scheme, Black body,yellow frame, yellow safety stripes on the pilots and yellow lettering with SSRy under the number on the cab--- when I get around to painting it..

 

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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