Skip to main content

I have my station apart to do mortar lines. It is the red brick with dull gray window frames, and I am looking for color recommendations for the windows and roof. There are a couple examples in the archives, but of the tan brick. Any advice on painting the accent molding under the eaves? Can you show what you have done? Thanks.

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Hope to have it done in the next couple weeks, but I am making extensive changes as shown below.

I have cut off the side platforms and side roofs to reduce the footprint of the building. It will end up being a REA freight station rather than a passenger station when I am done.

IMG_1206

Cut an opening in insert a freight door (1), covered the plastic deck with individual wood planks (2), and added height to the platform so that it is at proper level of boxcar door.

IMG_1368a

Detail showing adding wood planks. The front edge will be sanded so all planks are the same length.

IMG_1376

Attachments

Images (3)
  • IMG_1206
  • IMG_1368a
  • IMG_1376

I did mine recently, like you, I have to give many thanks and credits to Rich Battista as his video covers this topic really well.   I two tone painted the windows and doors, Used Rustoleum Espresso SemiGloss for the dark brown color, and Rustoleum Camouflage Sand for the 2nd color on the windows....

I painted the brick with Krylon Maxx Rust colored primer, then colored about 30 percent of the bricks with two other colors, one was the rust color pen for painting rails, and the other was a flat brown out of a rustoleum can applied with a small brush... I tinted the white spackling before I applied it, as I didn't want to wash the whole building with india ink and alcohol and change the brick color.   Removed the base and built a new base after seeing the post on OGR by Ed Rappe....   Mounted 6 LED lights over the exterior station platform  and 4 more inside on the first floor (I added a second floor) so it remains dark for now.   I used 3 MM pre-wired Warm White LED's that I buy off of ebay with the resistor already wired in....  Sorry I dont have better photos of the LED install.   

Attachments

Images (4)
  • DSCN3727 (2)
  • DSCN3730 (2)
  • DSCN3728
  • DSCN3729

I sprayed 3 different colors of the cheap 99 cent flat spray paint from Walmart.... Flat Black, Flat White and Flat Gray....  I keep the can 18 to 24 inches away and spray light coats,  Lay down a 80 percent coverage coat of black, then add the gray and white to get the shades I am looking.   Once dry I hit it with a light coat of Dull Coat, actually the Krylon or Rustoleum equivalent, then finished it with some white, black and gray pastel/chalk powders.   When I thought I had what I wanted I sealed it with the Flat Matte clear coat again.   Sounds really involved when you describe it but it didn't take that long.   The 99 cent paints dry really fast, especially doing light coats from 1 1/2 feet away, the paint actually starts drying before it hits the roof, so it actually leaves texture that wasn't there...  I try to post a better close up photo tomorrow.   Also,  the Krylon MAXX Red Oxide primer is great stuff for brick color and a base coat on wheel trucks or anything you want to "rust" I follow it up with alcohol and india ink, and then some Rustall.... It's a super flat paint and it's more orange than most other red oxide primers which I find to be too dark in the maroon family.

Nice color choice for the brick and trim on your station JD.   

MSP.... The Block retaining wall behind the station is Pink Styrofoam insulation board.   I scribed the blocks with sharp pencils, textured, and painted with spray paints & acrylics.   I started with 1 inch thick foam, cut it in half down to about 3/8 inch thick on a table saw then I was able to bend it in a 48 inch radius and glue it to some wood frames with Gorilla Glue so it would keep the curve profile.  I have a lot of it all over the layout, and couldn't justify spending that much on Woodland Scenics PRR Block Retaining Wall system.   

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×