Westlake Publishing Forums

General Category => Painting & Weathering Techniques => Topic started by: NORCALLOGGER on November 14, 2009, 07:17:33 PM

Title: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: NORCALLOGGER on November 14, 2009, 07:17:33 PM
Hi all,
Just noticed this today while working on something else and thought it might be of interest for some to see how the model (1:20 scale) holds up to the real world elements.

This building facade has been out about 3-4 years with no maintainence.  It was constructed of Cedar and Redwood, if I remember correctly, no guarantee there, the siding was sawn into 3/4 inch fence boards and the door and window added over.  It was painted and installed clean and fresh and the sun, wind, and rain have done the rest.

I could work with paint, dyes, and pigments for hours and not achive this finish.

Thanks for taking a look.
Rick Marty

Title: Re: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: finescalerr on November 15, 2009, 12:56:23 AM
Rick, I think you have discovered the Most Important Secret Weathering Trick of all time. -- Russ
Title: Re: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: marc_reusser on November 15, 2009, 02:49:46 AM
Looks great. I really like how the doors, and the platform weathered.


M
Title: Re: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: lab-dad on November 15, 2009, 12:14:32 PM
WOW it looks real....'cause it is!
-Marty
Title: Re: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: RoughboyModelworks on November 15, 2009, 12:36:20 PM
That's great Rick. The platform and doors have wonderful tones and depth to them. No one can accuse you of unrealistic weathering, that's for sure...

Paul
Title: Re: 1 TO 1 WEATHERING AND THE MODEL
Post by: Ray Dunakin on November 15, 2009, 06:47:44 PM
That's one thing about using real wood outdoors, it usually weathers fairly nicely. I've seen so many plastic models on outdoor layouts, where the builder simply trusts nature to do the weathering. The effect isn't realistic at all -- it just looks like a weathered toy.