Steamfan77 wrote:Hey Frank...I love the detail not only for the final result, but I also appreciate the effort and care you put into all the work. Hope to see more pictures in the future. It's both an inspiration and a reminder of how far I can go.
Thanks,
Andy
Hi Andy, I much appreciate the pleasantness, encouragement, and outreach of your reply. And it would be super to see your progress, as you mentioned.
Regarding the effort and care involved in modeling for the layout, I quickly discovered that, as soon as I had given myself permission to reach back to my youth and enjoy trains again, that the adventure of finding and buying the trains themselves evolved into a satisfaction in the creative expression. Making the layout became the next aspect of what was enjoyable about our hobby for me.
A layout meant sharing the happiness I got out of having trains, once again after 50 years, with others who might enjoy experiencing them, too, with me. The layout became the liaison for that connection.
So, I guess we could say I went from collecting trains to crafting a layout to sharing it all with others.
For crafting a layout, I gave myself a few "rules":
(1) Never skimp on foliage, particularly trees. If I can't afford to do a scene as natural looking as possible, then I am not doing it at all, or until I can save the money to do so.
(2) I buy everything and craft every element needed for a scene I have in mind before starting. Then, I array every element around me and start. I don't like stopping the progress of a scene just because I don't have enough gravel, or shrubbery, for example. The only element that sometimes gets serendipitously added upon completion can be vehicles, some of the time.
(3) I open my eyes and look around. I do not depend on remembering a particular scene. I go and look, like at the side of the road, where the forest meets the shaved hillside. I may have
thought I knew what such a place looked like. But a drive-by visit informed me otherwise.
(4) I don't craft places I do not have personal experience visiting, That is why I have never crafted a desert environment, like where Wayne lives. Even though I have had the advantage of seeing glimpses of the landscape he has chosen to show us, having not been there personally to see the details and to
feel the atmosphere of the place, I would not even attempt modeling it.