It sounds far more dramatic than it probably is...
Adopting the fortnightly posting approach has been a blessing and a curse. On the one hand, I can get a good few weeks worth of updates finished up in one sitting, on the other hand progress can sometimes happen in leaps and bounds quicker than posts can keep track of them!
So here we are, with one week to go till the contest deadline, a quick rapid fire of a select few construction milestones for the challenge layout. It's scary just how quickly the deadline has come around!
There was a very brief glimpse of an Airfix Matador kit a few weeks back, assembled and then cut at a jaunty angle. It works better than anticipated as a nice view block on the 'road to nowhere', making the scene feel deeper than it really is at this track level view (Remember, this is an Ikea Mosslanda layout, it's only 9cm deep!)
The yard gates are lightly bashed ScaleModelScenery platform fences, whilst the Pre-Worboys road signs help to set the scene firmly in the 1950s. I'm not quite sure why the postbox keeps glowing a luminous red in every photograph I take of it. It is painted a dull matt red, honest!
The layout has also come to life with the addition of figures, all coming from the Monty's Models range. I was asked why I was using white metal figures when high detailed 3D printed options, like those from Modelu, are now available. The answer? This is the one manufacturer I know who produces the stereotypical vicar in a panama hat! That said, the sharpness of the moulding on the station staff figure is incredible.
The conductor figure is part of a set with a bus driver, and due to the coach being one of the old Egger Bahn HOe stable, both his shoes and hat needed A LOT of filing down to fit. He's ended up wearing more of a flat cap than a peaked cap. A bit of a happy accident really, as this pose was very much inspired by a photo in K.E.Hartley & Paul Ingham book on the Sand Hutton Light Railway. It's quite a good match.
And finally, one of those jobs I'd been putting off for far too long - finishing some wagons for the layout. From right to left we have: A Corris brake (running as a boxvan), a tarpaulin covered wagon (A 'how to' is probably on the cards for next year), a coal wagon, a wagon full of timber and finally, the classic wagon load of milk churns and sacks from the Wills range.
For something different I tried weathering these using the range of washes from the Citadel Miniatures range. The results are... mixed. It goes on well enough, but it seems to 'pool' on any model I've applied it too., like it's a thicker mixture than the normal watered down acrylics. I've tried shaking and stirring the pot before application but the result is always the same. A little disappointing.
And that's a wrap (For now!) Next time the layout graces this blog will be the 'grand reveal' of a terrible punchline...
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