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MBA posted:

I made a new tinplate video of my 4' x 8' layout.  ...And yes, there is some Duke Ellington.  Enjoy!  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q56yEuYZjM

 

I am in LOVE with this terrific layout!!!! just wonderful I'm sharing this on my Fb page so more people can discover it.

The trains seen here are all O-scale tinplate, yes??

Is the mickey and minnie handcar an original, or the kitbashed out of the Hallmark ornament?

Carey TeaRose posted:
MBA posted:

I made a new tinplate video of my 4' x 8' layout.  ...And yes, there is some Duke Ellington.  Enjoy!  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q56yEuYZjM

 

I am in LOVE with this terrific layout!!!! just wonderful I'm sharing this on my Fb page so more people can discover it.

The trains seen here are all O-scale tinplate, yes??

Is the mickey and minnie handcar an original, or the kitbashed out of the Hallmark ornament?

Carey,  Everything is O-Scale.  The Mickey handcar is "kitbashed".

-Matt

I'm a scale guy with just a passing interest in tinplate and I think this is one of the best home made train videos I have ever seen. From the trains, to the soundtrack, to the lighting, to the steady camera work, it is extremely professionally done. I love the backdrop too. I think a nice backdrop like what you have adds so much to the layout. Great video. I really enjoyed it! 

Mill City posted:
Carey TeaRose posted:
Mill City posted:
 Your "stone" walls and elevated piers caught my eye. Their colors and dimensions remind me of Richter (Anker) building stones.

are they?

No. But I was curious if they may have been the inspiration.

Hi Jon,

I haven't seen the Richter building stones before.  My inspiration was the scrap wood that I had in my garage and the want to build a cheap elevated platform.  I got excited after I made the platform so I decided to build a wall, arches and a tunnel.  I primarily used strips of 2" x 8' pine that I found at Home Depot for about $1.50 and some pieces of scrap wood that I already had.  I used a miter saw to cut everything and a chisel to add the brick pattern to the wall.  Everything is held together with wood glue.  I painted everything in high gloss colors that I thought looked true to the tinplate era.  I was able to build and paint all of the supports, the platform, the tunnel, and wall for under $30.  It was a fun winter project that took about 2 weeks to complete.

-Matt

MBA posted:

Hi Jon,

I haven't seen the Richter building stones before.  My inspiration was the scrap wood that I had in my garage and the want to build a cheap elevated platform.  I got excited after I made the platform so I decided to build a wall, arches and a tunnel.  I primarily used strips of 2" x 8' pine that I found at Home Depot for about $1.50 and some pieces of scrap wood that I already had.  I used a miter saw to cut everything and a chisel to add the brick pattern to the wall.  Everything is held together with wood glue.  I painted everything in high gloss colors that I thought looked true to the tinplate era.  I was able to build and paint all of the supports, the platform, the tunnel, and wall for under $30.  It was a fun winter project that took about 2 weeks to complete.

-Matt

Thanks for your reply, Matt. For not having seen Anker stones before, you mimicked them pretty well. This is basic stone #19, it's 25mm x 25mm x 12.5mm. Note the beveled edges...

The effect you achieved is great, and for not a lot of money. To build what you have with Anker would be a small fortune. I'm going to keep your layout in mind, it's really fun.

Mill City posted:
MBA posted:

Hi Jon,

I haven't seen the Richter building stones before.  My inspiration was the scrap wood that I had in my garage and the want to build a cheap elevated platform.  I got excited after I made the platform so I decided to build a wall, arches and a tunnel.  I primarily used strips of 2" x 8' pine that I found at Home Depot for about $1.50 and some pieces of scrap wood that I already had.  I used a miter saw to cut everything and a chisel to add the brick pattern to the wall.  Everything is held together with wood glue.  I painted everything in high gloss colors that I thought looked true to the tinplate era.  I was able to build and paint all of the supports, the platform, the tunnel, and wall for under $30.  It was a fun winter project that took about 2 weeks to complete.

-Matt

Thanks for your reply, Matt. For not having seen Anker stones before, you mimicked them pretty well. This is basic stone #19, it's 25mm x 25mm x 12.5mm. Note the beveled edges...

The effect you achieved is great, and for not a lot of money. To build what you have with Anker would be a small fortune. I'm going to keep your layout in mind, it's really fun.

I just looked at these blocks on Amazon.  Yikes!!!  They look awesome but they are in the $200-$300 range for a small block set.  Go to Home Depot and get some cheap 8' furring strips.  You can cut them down and sand them to look like these bricks for just a couple of bucks.  Shoot, with the money you save from not buying the stones, you can go out and buy another train!

-Matt

MBA posted:
Mill City posted:
MBA posted:

Hi Jon,

I haven't seen the Richter building stones before.  My inspiration was the scrap wood that I had in my garage and the want to build a cheap elevated platform.  I got excited after I made the platform so I decided to build a wall, arches and a tunnel.  I primarily used strips of 2" x 8' pine that I found at Home Depot for about $1.50 and some pieces of scrap wood that I already had.  I used a miter saw to cut everything and a chisel to add the brick pattern to the wall.  Everything is held together with wood glue.  I painted everything in high gloss colors that I thought looked true to the tinplate era.  I was able to build and paint all of the supports, the platform, the tunnel, and wall for under $30.  It was a fun winter project that took about 2 weeks to complete.

-Matt

Thanks for your reply, Matt. For not having seen Anker stones before, you mimicked them pretty well. This is basic stone #19, it's 25mm x 25mm x 12.5mm. Note the beveled edges...

The effect you achieved is great, and for not a lot of money. To build what you have with Anker would be a small fortune. I'm going to keep your layout in mind, it's really fun.

I just looked at these blocks on Amazon.  Yikes!!!  They look awesome but they are in the $200-$300 range for a small block set.  Go to Home Depot and get some cheap 8' furring strips.  You can cut them down and sand them to look like these bricks for just a couple of bucks.  Shoot, with the money you save from not buying the stones, you can go out and buy another train!

-Matt

I REALLY love the look of the 'blocks' used as walls, piers etc. on this video- MBA- its most  inspiring! To me they look like the old timey kid's wooden blocks like I had for my kids, with being painted up to match the tinplate. A perfect toy-look match for the  tinplate.

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