Thursday, 27 February 2025

Loctern Quay to be at Wealden Show

Just over a week to go until the next show, the Wealden Group show in Steyning. This time it is Loctern Quay that will be out. The Wealden show was actually the first outing for Loctern Quay in March 2020 - and it's last for a couple of years! 

I've not had much time for my modelling recently but I'd better spend the next week checking over the layout and making sure everything works. It's a complete layout and has done several exhibitions now, but I don't take smooth running and (mostly) reliable couplings for granted. 

The Wealden show focuses on smaller layouts and usually has a good number of narrow gauge layouts, it also has a relaxed and friendly feel. If you make it, do say hello. 

The Wealden Model Railway Group Exhibition

Sunday 9th March 2025, 10:00-16:30

Steyning Centre, Fletchers Croft, Steyning BN44 3XZ.

https://www.thewealdenrailway.club/steyning-2025-exhibition.html

Monday, 24 February 2025

A small warehouse

Not much activity on my own modelling projects recently, but I have completed a building for our club 009 layout. It's a small warehouse, store, or industry that will sit alongside a siding. A cardboard mock-up had been used to determine the size and shape that both looked right, and disguised another track exiting behind it. 


The basic shell is made from Wills brick sheets with chamfered corners, Wills windows, and plasticard used for an internal floor and loading platform. Sills, lintels, doors and a sliding door rail cover are made from thinner plastic, and a lifting beam projecting from a first floor door has been added from Plastruct and scrap plastic. 


Painting used artists acrylics. After an overall coat of brick orange/brown, random individual bricks were picked out in varying shades of red, orange, brown, and dark brown/black. A beige/sand mortar colour was mixed a little thinner and flooded onto the brickwork (see right), then wiped off using kitchen towel in a diagonal motion (see left), leaving the mortar colour in the courses while removing most from the face of the bricks. 


For variety and to emphasise the building's utilitarian nature, a corrugated iron roof was decided upon. This was also made from Wills sheets, with a foil ridge, plasticard barge boards and gutters (the outer lower corner of a 1mm strip is rounded off to look half-round). I've had this set of rust effect paints in a while and this seemed a good chance to use them. 


I primed the plastic with automotive red primer, then worked through the colours in the airbrush as per the instructions - with random patches and density. The process was quick, I just flushed some water through the airbrush and moved on to the next colour. 


I applied the chipping medium by brush, allowing me to create patches and streaks that align to the edges of the panels. I expect spraying would allow more random outbreak of rust. Once dry, the top coat of off-black (with a little grey) was airbrushed on.

The chipping was done with a wet brush, and the end of a wooden coffee stirrer which proved very effective. As the end blunted, it shaped to the corrugations. 


The result seems quite effective, although perhaps the rust could have more texture. Thanks to the mock-ups the building has pleasing, squat, proportions, and the mix of brick and corrugated iron along with details such as the sliding doors and lifting beam give an industrial feel. 


It may be a little while until it is permanently fixed to the under-construction layout...