Saturday, December 6, 2014

Quick-Changing Styrene to Wood



Here's a question for you . . .

Pictured are the "wood" parts representing interior bracing & racks for the Walthers Walton & Sons Lumber Co. kit. I'll be using this kit to represent the Wethersfield Lumber Co. on my layout.

I've come across a couple of nice websites here and here that do a good job of explaining how to distress & paint/stain/finish styrene to look like weathered wood. The results are nothing short of contest-quality, but seem to be a bit of overkill for something that will be mostly hidden (I plan to build the kit like this:


...so, as you can see, most of that detail will be hidden).

The question is: How would you paint/finish all that interior detail? I know not to just build it "as-is", relying on the molded plastic color.

So what's a quick and easy approach you'd recommend?

Barring any alternatives, perhaps I'll use these parts as a way to practice that "contest quality" approach - but that will make the build take longer. And I think that's time that would be better spent on things you can actually see :)

While I'm at it, here's another question.... How would you do the exterior walls and roof?

I was thinking just shooting Grimy Black on the roof parts and weathering them. As for the walls, I'm considering trying a "peeling paint" technique - where I spray it with some sort of "weathered wood" base color (or perhaps - yikes! - do the weathered wood technique from those websites!) and then brush on some rubber cement before shooting a top coat. Erase the paint from the rubber and - voila! - peeling paint.

What do you think? Any other tips/approaches you'd suggest?

5 comments:

  1. http://www.pacificcoastairlinerr.com/weathered_wood/

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    1. Very cool - that's from the same guy that did the article I linked to first. Great techniques!

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  2. Oops. Missed the first link. Really quick and easy though!

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  3. BTW - are you planning on keeping them as two separate buildings, or combining them as in that picture? Either way, I would stick with a coat of 'wood colored' paint with possibly a darker brown wash to bring out some of the details. For the interior bracing and interior wood stacks I wouldn't make faded wood, nor much weathering at all since the purpose of the sheds is to keep the wood out of the elements.

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    1. I'll be combining the buildings as in the photo. Good point wrt interior finish!

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