The farm where I grew up in Penna. had a stone barn that had the stonework whitewashed many years before. The second story gable was wood timber framed. This little 4 inch square diorama/shadow box will hang on the wall and be about 3 inches deep. The wall itself will be about 1/2 inch from the front so I can scenic it and there will be some of the wood structure above showing.
So far what I've done is mounted 1/16 inch architectural taskboard to 1/4 inch plywood and cut out for one of the doors to be open. The other will remain shut. I plastered it with a quick set drywall compound and scribed the stones with a dental pick. It was then sanded and painted with light brown acrylic. I then dry brushed a dirty white on it. The vehicle shown will probably not be the final choice but I wanted to see how the front clip shadowed. The door is 1/32 inch red birch veneer I use in some of my work. The hinges are made from paper. Still lots to do but this was an evenings work.
(https://www.finescalerr.com/smf/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi191.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fz79%2Fchesterf%2Fin%2520progress%2F1b-10.jpg&hash=9d49de266fd8b72e3709c573c70a7ed673f58ca7)
(https://www.finescalerr.com/smf/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi191.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fz79%2Fchesterf%2Fin%2520progress%2F1c-7.jpg&hash=a702dd4767fc1be0259105276e87997c06972747)
Took a few minutes to hit things with some colored pencils and think it makes a big difference.
(https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/_DctpsUchoDo/TctFr9Y9ZJI/AAAAAAAAA3U/8Pbnu6qC0Jk/s576/2b.jpg)
Chester --
Real neat concept for the wall-hanging shadowbox ... it's shaping up beautifully (actually, downright amazing for the amount of time indicated) ... and those colored pencils definitely made a difference (nicely).
That last close-up is a real neat shot. Very simple composition that tells a very evocative story immediately.
Look forward to seeing it all come together,
Dallas
Chester,
Neat concept and looking good. I like the subtlety of the colored pencils.
Marc
PS. The first pic doesn't seem to load...don't know if it's just me. :)
Nice work with the pencils. I like the general concept. No nitpick yet. -- Russ
I think the most important is the result.
Only for me is the way to go there always the most beautiful and important.
But Chester are you sure on the right track.
So be it pens, crayons, powder paints, airbrush, or only with the brush, the journey is the destination.
That is a neat concept. I'll be interested to see how you finish it off.
Thanks all, I guess I'll keep going on it then. Would like some input now on the boards above. Have been contemplating whether to paint them like the door or leave them gray. Did more pencil, too much, have to tone it down a bit.
(https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_DctpsUchoDo/TcwGVG5gAjI/AAAAAAAAA3Y/P7GinMdGzTU/s512/6ds.jpg)
They could go either way. The red might stand out more.
G'day all,
Quote from: chester on May 12, 2011, 09:13:33 AM
... Would like some input now on the boards above. Have been contemplating whether to paint them like the door or leave them gray...
... well, I'd suggest to leave them gray/dark, as i. e. can be seen here at this huge barn in my neighbourhood, which is going to be a prototype building regarding my future layout called "Gutshof Uhlenbuettel" (Uhlenbuettel Estate):
(https://www.finescalerr.com/smf/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.feldbahnmodellbau.de%2Fgallery%2Fimage.php%3Falbum_id%3D9%26amp%3Bimage_id%3D189&hash=a35d323fdc5620958f99cd7f6a7029fb051fadb1)
Kind regards
Hi, Chester -
Great looking wall and door. Is it me, or is the whole wall tilted a bit out of plumb?
Perhaps it's the camera angle? FWIW, I too think the wall should be red, like the door.
I sent you a PM,
Carlo
For what it's worth .. my house has two stories. I painted the door to the garage/shop because I could easily do so. I have been 'eyeballing' the shutters on the second floor for at least two years .. so I vote for leaving the wood brown. :)
I love your model, Chester. Personnally, I would leave the wall brown, and find Gerald's example a nice dark coloration of wood.
OK after way too many hits off the growler from a local micro brewery and all the suggestions I'm leaving the wall as is. This then is the finished product however the vehicle again may change before it's all put together. The ivy is a lichen called "old man's beard" painted brown and dipped in tea leaves while wet and then sprayed old ivy green.
(https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/_DctpsUchoDo/TcyF-PsSLvI/AAAAAAAAA3c/cEkcJALFc6A/s512/7bs.jpg)
The frame is finished but first coat of finish is drying at the moment.
Nice! I'm looking forward to seeing it in the frame.
Nothin' wrong with that. -- Russ
Quote from: Ray Dunakin on May 12, 2011, 10:27:32 PM
Nice! I'm looking forward to seeing it in the frame.
Just a plain cherry box essentially. Thanks everyone for the nice comments.
Looks great!
What a great idea! Very nice work in a beautiful box. What else to expect from a pro. carpenter ????
Anders ;D
It's a jewel, Chester.
Build more. -- Russ
Beautiful, Chester!!
Jerry