As a cursory glance through my photography blog or insta will attest, I like the seaside. Hot days on the beach and colourful, kitsch tat as the subject for photography shoots. So, when asked by BRM to build and personalise the venerable Dapol General Store kit, I thought I'd do a seaside shop; this was, indeed, one of the first builds I did for BRM, and I didn't tell the Editor I was going for full 90's colourful cheese, so they ended up holding the article over for a year to hit the nice weather.
This is the sort of thing I was thinking about; colourful, plastic rubbish, contrasted with the dour, dull looking old shop.
The kit; warped-walls and all. Still, if using soft recycled plastic allows Dapol to eke a bit more life out of these kits, I'm all for it, I love this range.
Personalising it was a matter of hitting the scrap box; many years of building these kits and making other models using bits of them has resulted in quite the pile of odds and ends.
Painting by the usual method; Citadel acrylics and washes.
I thought the building was very much a boring box, so took a bit of inspiration from Llandudno...
...and added a canopy.
For the window displays, in a rare moment of good timing, the need to photograph a load of toys coincided with us having the props boxes out for our simulated Paediatrics Ward and childs bedroom for a course I was setting up.
More tat! Beads, Playmobil, Airfix animals, aircraft kit tyres, and such.
And there we go.
What I was after, effect-wise; dull browns and greys on the building, colourful tat on the outside.
I wanted a header image, so again raided the spares and bits boxes to build a little set. Loosely inspired by places like Barmouth on the Cambrian Coast.
Shooting at sunrise; the morning sun if anything too low, but I suppose it looks like the sun-worshipers were getting in early.
Second shoot, after work. I'd originally planned to shoot somewhere with a properly dramatic sky, but cheated in the end by printing a shot I took at Harlech a while ago. That way I could focus on photographing the model, not worrying about the weather out on some hillside somewhere. Plus, always an advantage, I was doing the shoot within 10 foot of the teapot.
And there we go. I'll be honest, I absolutely loved this build, it was a great deal of fun. I'm just fighting the temptation now to do a seaside-set model railway for the planned 00 scale layout I'm wanting to build... There'll be a bit more over the next two days (he threatens) on the smaller details.



























































