Sunday, September 25, 2011

Woods Furniture

This is a DPM "Gold" kit, tres' expensive, but I got it for-cheap about 8 years ago (?) and just haven't done anything with it because there are just SO MANY PIECES (see for yourself: here are the instructions). I decided that I was brave enough and skilled enough now through practicing on the smaller kits to tackle this big one. One thing that especially helped was finding a brick-mortar coloring technique that worked for me: slathering on enough white-ish paint to pretty much cover one small section at a time (this helps you know the mortar lines are filled), then wiping off the brick surface with a paper tissue. The tissue removes the paint on the face of the brick, but leaves the paint in between, where it's supposed to go. Is it prefect? Nope. Is it good enough? Yup. Is it better than any of my previous attempts? Absolutely! The white paint also helps to tone-down some of the redness of the brick as well, which isn't a bad thing.

The picture on the box is of the kit painted a yellowish brick color; such a color doesn't really exist in Maine, where red brick is the norm, so I left the red kit pieces alone and simply filled the mortar lines in with the white acrylic paint.

It's nowhere near completion, but here are some pictures from this weekend as I assembled it.

Assembled each wall from multiple pieces, then assembled the walls together.

The roofs are up.

 Before painting

During painting (see the contrast)

 Mostly painted

 Left one bay open, to put in a small interior scene (forklift, boxes, people, etc)

Not bad eh?

Working on the dock


The biggest "catch" to all this is that I bought the kit back when I had envisioned a larger layout, I honestly don't know if I have room on the current layout for this monster.

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