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PostPosted: Thu Jun 25, 2009 12:03 pm 
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That's sweet jay! I love seeing your buildings.


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 25, 2009 9:28 pm 
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Thanks Guys,

Having a day off from the salt mines, I got a chance to dedicate some serious time to the bench today. I got started by working over the windows. Chip includes extra window frames in the kit so that you can add them to overlay the original ones printed on the sides of the walls to make things look a little more pronounced. I decided to carry things a little further by clipping out an extra set of complete windows and trimming out the panes first. The little frames are sort of delicate when done this way so I took some Super Glue and went over them spreading it with a toothpick to reinforce them so they wouldn't tear out while I was working on things. Trimming out the extra frames that he gives you was relatively easy after just removing the panes. A sharp hobby knife makes this easy to do, just press the tip of the blade into the corners first and work your way around then flip the part over and working from the backside you can see where you need to trim out the rest of the lines.

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Adding them to the sides after scoring and folding the two main parts of the barn walls showed that a single window with the panes cut out and a single frame made them look much better. From there it was a set of the large double doors that were cut out along with the iron tracks at the top on either side and added. With my already prepared smaller end door added it was beginning to look pretty happening. I glued the sides together and then added the three part roof after folding the edges over and bending the glue tabs up on the outer panels. I also colored the parts of the roofs' undersides that would be hanging out over the edge of the walls so there wouldn't be any white showing up there.

Looking at where it was at was when I decided to add to the sections of the stone foundations along the bottom edge of the walls. I wound up with two extra sets of them getting glued to the bottom to make it look like I wanted it to. The corner strips got added once this was done so they wouldn't interfere with the stone foundation strips. I added the little cupola on the roof at that point. The illustrations show how to add a pair of lightening rods to the roof cupolas of both the barn and silo so I used a bit of stretched styrene sprue for this little detail since I could get the plastic to taper out easy enough. Since I have worked around a few barns in my time I knew that one thing seemed to be missing. While the extended roof on the side with the upper set of loft doors does show that feature, most barns I have seen also had a beam with a pulley and line to help haul up bales of hay or sacks of feed for storage in the loft.

I punched out a pair of discs from some black heavy card that I have laying about and added an axle to separate the two discs. A strip of foil was used to make a hanger for the pulley and a bit of squared toothpick was colored and glued in place for the beam extension. The little pulley assembly was glued in place at the end of the beam and I was able to drill a small hole in the top of the loft doors to accept a line from the pulley. I used some white thread drawing it over a Yellow Sharpie to make it look like rope then used some White Glue to stiffen it up a bit and made threading it through the hole out to the pulley and back into the hole again easier. I gave it a bit of a sag to look natural and then glued the two ends inside the barn roof. The small end panel door stands up a bit from where the ground would be so I folded up a small step using some printed out stone pattern from the extras folder and glued it in place under the door at the foundation. Another piece of the stone pattern was cut out and used at the large double doors for the pictures. So this is where I managed to get to with it. When it gets placed on the rail road layout, I can do some more extensive landscaping for it, but for now it can sit on the shelf like so.

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Jay Massey
treadhead1952
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 26, 2009 2:06 am 
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cmdr199212 wrote:
WOW Jay! Thats impressive!

I'll second that!

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 26, 2009 8:26 am 
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Just amazing Jay! I like the winch from the hay loft. Is that custom or part of the kit?


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 26, 2009 9:29 am 
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Hi Willy,

Thanks for the kind words.

The beam with the little pulley and rope are just additions that I came up with. Being an old farm boy and having worked around a lot of barns in my sordid youth, I am pretty familiar with such things. When you had to fill the hay loft up with bales of hay or 100 pound sacks of feed, it came in rather handy. I can even remember rigging up a truck or tractor with a bare wheel rim and using it as a winch to attatch the free end of the rope to make it easier than tugging on the load to get it up there.

Being into rail road layouts, the more little bits of eye candy you can toss into these things, the more interesting it becomes. Since the majority of the buildings I am working on will be going onto one eventually, I will probably be adding little extras like this that I can come up with along the way.

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treadhead1952
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 26, 2009 10:46 am 
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cool beans.....great models....keep em comin.... :D :D :D :D

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PostPosted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 1:09 pm 
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Thanks possm,

I don't think you have to worry about that too much. ;)

I started to work on the Captains' House model, another one of those with a nicely landscaped little yard and a Widows' Walk on the roof. Yes, I know, it means that I skipped a barn, but one of those for the moment is enough, I 'll come back and pick it up later.

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Jay Massey
treadhead1952
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:06 am 
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Hi All,

I got started on the Captains' House model from the New England Village set the other day and due to things happening at the salt mine had to drag it out a bit longer than it really should have taken. It is actually a pretty straightforward and easy one to build. I got started by printing out multiple copies to be able to use the extra parts to give it a bit more depth to some parts. This is the basic kit once the parts are cut out.

Image

It also has a white picket fence to go around the perimeter of the base, but I chose not to use it instead landscaping the base for it to fit into my upcoming rail road layout. Since I like to add some relief to these things, I used three copies of the front and rear of the house to start with. To use them I cut out the window and door openings in two of each copy like so.

Image

Now if you tried to just make a sandwich out of the front and rear parts you would soon wind up with a rather thick bit of card to try and fold up and glue together. You would also be shortchanging yourself on a few other parts that go a long way to bettering the look of the finished project. I cut the parts out that I actually needed around the windows and doors and frames to create my little bit of illusion. The front comes out like so.

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The rear part is pretty much the same.

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Gluing and aligning the main parts makes two main parts that you can handle bending tabs on but still gives them a lot more depth. As you can see in the next shot, I have also added the steps that were cut out from the sliced and diced printouts as well as the corner boards. These will be applied after gluing things together. By having recessed as well as exterior parts you have more layers on the model to make it look a bit more 3D. To make it appear even deeper for all the recessed parts I edge colored all the cut parts with some marker pens so no white card would be showing through here and there.

Image

From this point it is a lot more bending of tabs, aligning parts and gluing stuff together. The boards that go on the corners of the building were folded and applied once things were together. I used some scrap card to make a lip to glue the horizontal part of the front and rear step to then some more to add the vertical part of the step. The location of these are printed on the front and rear just under the door frames.

When I started this one I was fascinated by the widows' walk on the roof. In case you aren't familiar with what a widows' walk is, it is basically a platform built on the roof of the house so that the Captains' wife cold look out on the ocean to see when her hubbys' ship returned. Since long ocean voyages in the old days were somewhat problematic as far as actually having crews returning, the roof walk got the name Widows' Walk. The one on this model had a hatch printed on it and I used a couple of the copies to add some more dimension to that part but I also added a couple more things that were often featured up there from stories that I have read about them. The wrought iron safety fence around the walk itself got doubled so that it had an inside and outside. Since this pretty well negated the need for a tab, I just cut it off and end glued the ends together.

A telescope was often a part of these things to enable the lady of the house to scan the horizon for that first glimpse of the homeward bound ship. Also a small tree in a pot was planted up there to give the lady another reason to climb her way to the roof as well as a way to measure the time that it took for her beloved to return from his long voyage. It also proved to the captain that his lady had indeed spent her time looking for his return.

I used a spare brass machine gun barrel from some of my PE ship parts to act as the upright support, a staple cut and bent as the telescopes' mounting and (I know I will probably hear from possm) a bit of styrene tube and stretched sprue to make the telescope itself with a little painting for detail. To make the potted tree I started with a bit of stretched sprue chucked into a motor tool to spin it and a hobby knife to trim it to give it a bit of shape like an old milk can. The tree itself is another bit of stretched sprue with some landscaping material glued to the top to look like a young growing tree.

The base was made up from three of the printouts to form a thick enough part to take the glue and make it a bit thicker without deforming. I sprayed on some diluted white glue overall then added some fine green turf material for the grass. I cleared of the front and rear stone walk detail with a Q tip before it dried so these parts would show through. After the lawn had dried I added the house and then started using some more coarse landscaping material to form the bushes lining the walkway and around the house. Some more material was chopped up fine while the glue set on the bushes and then a second spray of the diluted white glue let me add the flowers to make it look like things were happening in the spring time. A final overall spray of the diluted white glue fixed everything in place so it wouldn't shed over time and I had my project done.

Image

Image

Image

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Jay Massey
treadhead1952
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:56 am 
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Superb as always Jay! That's a really neat one. I like the little observation deck on the roof.


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 11:41 am 
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kool beans dude!!!!!!!!!!!! superb work.......isnt that called a widows walk on top of the house????? :D :D :D :D :D

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Take your time leavin.....but hurry back!!!!
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 11:53 am 
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treadhead1952 wrote:
When I started this one I was fascinated by the widows' walk on the roof. In case you aren't familiar with what a widows' walk is, it is basically a platform built on the roof of the house so that the Captains' wife cold look out on the ocean to see when her hubbys' ship returned. Since long ocean voyages in the old days were somewhat problematic as far as actually having crews returning, the roof walk got the name Widows' Walk.

Yeah! :lol: Looks great Jay :D.

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 12:19 pm 
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Thanks Guys,

I appreciate the kind words for my humble efforts.

Yes possm, that is called a Widows' Walk. ;) :lol:

These are some great little kits and with a little imagination and creativity can be improved to offer features that set them above most of the pre built items that you can buy in hobby shops. I am looking forward to the next one to see what opportunities it offers for a little "imagineering" ( a Walt Disney word ).

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Jay Massey
treadhead1952
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