An overall view of how the layout looked at the beginning of June, with buildings in place to get an idea of how it looked. |
A view of the station and shed area, at this stage the sheds have yet to be painted, both are made from foamcore board with various cladding materials. |
The station office. I eventually decided that the brick base needed to be sunk in below platform level as it just looked odd from this angle! |
The real work begins! The shape of the sand dunes was built up with foamcore and corrugated cardboard, the 'ramp' will be a pathway eventually. |
I also built up the ground level below the ice cream parlour, it didn't look much at this stage but once scenically treated lookd at lot better. |
The roadway is made from mounting card placed face down on the baseboard, with a thin strip under the middle to give prototypical camber. |
The level crossing was built up from strips of timber and glued in place before the road surface went down. The roadway was then treated with 'button pollish' to better withstand scenic treatments. |
A constructive use for the local free paper.... I filled the gaps in the framing in order to give shape when the mod-roc is added. |
The area around the turning point with mod-roc in place. The fence hides what is best described as 'a bodge'. |
The completed dune area with other bits also visible, I found it easier to do the whole layout in one sitting. |
A cut-out in the landscape for the pill-box, which needs to be well bedded into the ground. |
Areas of the layout after completion of the 'hard' surfacing. Concrete areas were treated with Green Scene textured paints and sanded down to slightly smooth out the surface. This was then colour washed to get the shape about right. |
The tarmac areas were also treated with textured paint, but then had mix of paint and powdered filler added to smooth the surface out and get the right sort of colour. Tyre wear was added as weathering. |
The dunes - two layers of very fine sand went on here, held in place with both PVA glue and Matt Medium. |
After initial surface texturing of 'soft' areas with an earth mix, I used a hanging basket liner to produce the grassy areas, then cut the resultant growth with scissors and an old razor! |
The level crossing had this cross-hatching added by making stencils in Microsoft Excel and almost dry-brushing a yellow/cream paint mix through. |
The workshop/shed with painting well under way. The breeze block walling is scribed straight onto the foam core surface. |
A glimpse ahead, but one the hides a lot of work that still remains to be done! |
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