Saturday, 13 April 2024

A Photoplank for "Welsh Pony"


Having made the model of "Welsh Pony", I wanted to get some pics of it, and with lockdown keeping me from starting construction on the garden railway at the in-laws, I ended up raiding the woodpile to quickly knock-up a photoplank.


A bit of rudimentary carpentry, a bit of a bodge but then I was struggling to get hold of wood.


45mm gauge takes up a lot of room... especially when you're creating something that needs to fit and store in a box.


The printer was out of action, but luckily I had a folder full of brick paper and things created way back for the Britannia Model Village project.



I needed a cliff-face, and ended up creating one with some packing paper...


...tester-pot paints...


...and PVA.


Trees were trickier, but we had a few of these slightly naff Christmas decorations up in the loft which had been bought to be background props for the comics.  They'd need a quick respray.


I was struggling for figures, to this size, but had a couple I thought I could rebuild a bit for the pics.


The coaches were going to be tricky, but a raid of the loft produced these three cabooses (cabeese?) from Echo Toys sets, the same sets which had already donated parts for "Welsh Pony" itself.


I wanted three fairly generic, vaguely Ffestiniog coaches (they'd be out of focus in the background) so thought card and scrap acrylic from CD cases would to the trick for the bodies.



Tudor half-timbered carriages.


Making the ends and the chassis from more scrap wood.






On the Echo Toys chassis; designed to be removable as I wanted the chassis for re-use again in the future.


Unable to leave the house, I needed to improv a way of trying to get a decent background, so these rather precarious legs were built.


Shame about the house wall on the right.


USB-driven humidifiers for steam effects.



The lamps are battery-powered Sylvanian Families items, picked up clearance at TK Maxx the year before.





I wasn sort-of happy with the night shoot, it felt like it would have worked better with a nicer background mindyou.


The next morning it was out in the garden for some shots.


Attempt at a long-exposure pic, towing the loco with the camera on a flat wagon.


This is the sort of thing I wanted for the actual garden railway.



I think the daylight shots actually worked better.  And it was a lot of a bodge, but it did what it needed to do, with a nicely distracting lockdown project.  The photoplank though was a bit limited in what angles it could provide (being created specifically for this project), so I planned a bit for a rebuild, of which more in a future post...

 

Thursday, 11 April 2024

'Eugy Red Fox' (Montly Minikit)



A couple of years ago, we were looking for stocking-fillers for The Childs, and spotted these rather nice kits.  One apiece for them, and me and Amy picked up one apiece for ourselves.


It sat in a draw for a while, then came a night where I was feeling rather ill, recovering from a hospital procedure, and out came the kit.


It's nicely presented and designed.


Lovely clear-cut parts too.


Very little flash and tabs holding the parts onto the sprues.


Well designed in terms of what goes where and what order.


The kit came with this glue, which did a nice job of attaching the parts.


The parts are slightly matt-textured, and the glue bonds well.


A nice touch; alternate parts if you don't want the logo of the manufacturing company displayed.


Whilst most of the kit is card, the eyes are plastic.


Done.


I fancied getting some of the pics out in the countryside, and so took the little fox up to Wales with me.




I really liked this kit; to the point I've bought a few more.  They're calming to build, don't need too much thought as they practically fall together, and look really nice when they're done.


Slightly clumsy, but yes, the comic is expanding a bit... Arf, one of the regular characters I have been doodling in sketchbooks, notebooks, diaries, and on walls since 2003, is now back :)