healey36 wrote:They look sharp, George, and should look right at home on your city streets. Slight variations in the scheme is something I remember seeing on the old Baltimore Transit Company's equipment back in the 1960s, although theirs wasn't quite as ornate as these.
Thanks! I was just blown away by the job he did on them. They are very complex paint schemes - deceptively so. In fact, he told me they were the most difficult paint jobs he had ever done. I think he made several attempts, going back to bare plastic on paint jobs he didn't like.
My only contributions were the bus company logo (decals) and the prototype photographs. The skill was all his.
healey36 wrote:I've never been to Tommy Gilbert's shop, but I spent considerable time and treasure in the old Gilbert's shop that was on Steinwehr Avenue. I have fond memories of buying Airfix and Revell 1/72 kits in there, the boxes tied shut with a bit of twine (I have a partially built Bf-110C sitting on my desk that came from there some 30+ years ago) along with a lot of N-gauge gear.
His shop is on E. Water Street. I went in there years ago, maybe as part of a trip for the kids to the battlefield or their favorite tourist trap, Land of Little Horses.

I was impressed by his photos of previous paint jobs. Exquisite. So I commissioned him to paint my Lionel Alco S-2. He transformed it from Western Pacific #553 to Weirton Steel #208, including a rebuilding of the stack to match the prototype's engine-specific modification. That was another spectacular job. I figured the buses would be easier. Boy, was I wrong.
George