RickO
Love your corner mountain / tunnel --- How did you build paint weather it etc
Thx
Joe S
Thanks Joe!
3 or 4 boxes with the flaps cut off turned upside down and openings were cut in the ends just large enough for the trains to pass through to retain the box strength. ( Obviously if you cut the ends all the way off a box just flattens.
The boxes were then glued to the layout top/pink foam with hot glue.
Newspaper wads were taped to the tops of the boxes, to remove any "boxy" shape and the tunnel portholes were hot glue to the box ends and layout top and any gaps were filled with styrofoam pieces.
Then Woodland Scenics plaster cloth was laid over the newspaper and boxes down to the base of the mountain.
After drying, I watered down some drywall spackle into a paste and brushed it onto any of the holes showing through the plaster cloth. Then let that dry.
With the exception of the areas I wanted snow on, the whole mountain was painted with Woodland Scenics c1218 stone gray liquid pigment.
Rocky outcroppings were accentuated by brushing them with Woodland Scenics c1219 slate gray liquid pigment to give some contrast.
The nice thing about these liquid pigments is that they're water soluble. I diluted them fairly well and they become more of a wash that absorbs into the plaster leaving a nice flat earthy finish. A little bottle goes a long way diluted.
I brushed on some white glue and added woodland scenics snow to the desired areas. I sprayed 50/50 water glue mix and added a second layer of snow as needed.
Then a little hot glue on the pine tree bases and poked them through the plaster cloth as desired, and spinkled them with snow as well.
On the right side of the tunnel porthole in my first photo you can see some black felt sticking out I didn't secure properly.
The whole right side of the mountain is not sceniced, and has a piece of removable black felt going across it secured with push pins into the boxes and plaster coth. This allows me to be able to clean the track within the tunnel as well as fix any derailments that occur inside.
NOTE: The portholes visible in my photos 8 and 9 are too close to the curve. This is one of those " I would have done that differently" learned from my first layout experiences. STRAIGHTS ONLY IN AND OUT OF TUNNELS.
If you look closely you can see where I had to "modify" one of the portholes to keep the cab of my scale berkshire from hitting it
All in all, it may sound like alot of steps, but the mountain was easy, went up fast, and ended up looking much better than I expected. Its far from the most realistic, especially when compared to some of the real scenery experts on the forum, but I think it gives the desired effect.