Showing posts with label dioramas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dioramas. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Wagon Loads #1: Timber, Crates, & Machinery


A while ago now, I shared how to paint these flat cars from Bachmann Branchline to look how they might be on Sodor. Here, I will share the loads I made for them.

Freight cars look the more realistic when time and care is taken to weather them, as well as adding loads. It is exciting to make them yourself, and even when you buy them from the hobby shop, cargo looks much better when repainted and weathered too. Loads are important too.


Even in an empty wagon like this one, pastel and chalk dust brushed onto the plank boards inside the wagon gives us a clue that this car has carried coal, or quarry gravel, or what have you.


So here we go for the flat cars. These lumber piles are made from scratch by cutting lengths of balsa wood, and using Elmer's white glue to piece them together with the smaller supporting planks.


Using this technique, you can make loads of lumber for any car you want, using different lengths of balsa, more or less stacked together, and made into smaller sizes for vehicles and smaller cars, or really large sizes for bigger cars! The small load of pipes were made from spare cardboard tubes I found. Any spare part from your plastic kit you want to throw away can be a key element to add interest on your layout!



These crates are made from textured card-stock. I was inspired to create these from looking at Preiser spare parts and loads in my Walther's Catalog! It is amazing what you can create from what little you might have lying in the cupboards of your art studio or in your home! I made sure they were decorated with small stamped stencils drawn with pen, and small colored labels made from copy paper and bits of spare card. Some I made open with foam for packaging, or loaded with something like spare track pins as ties to display the load they carry on a dock or platform. It takes a little time, about a half and hour or so for me, but very easy to make.


Finally here are a cluster of covered machinery from Chooch Enterprises. Painting can enhance shadows and lighting effects in addition to wear and tear as well! I painted them using light gray acrylic, then lightly brushed them using the same paint mixed with white to bring out the folds of the tarp. I might also slam dunk them in a mixture of equal parts of water and india ink to enhance the shadow, and a little grime.

There's loads for you!

Monday, June 3, 2013

Visions of Sodor ~ The Watermill

Here is the Watermill on Thomas' Branchline. This was always a well-known scene on Sodor, and so I wanted to recreate the diorama for my model railway to take photographs and film.


Here my green afghan quilt is used for grass. The hills are made with spare wood planks, pieces and boards placed underneath, with cardboard boxes to make the shapes. As nothing is permanent, this is a great method for me as I can change the scene to how I want it to look. I could rearrange the Woodland Scenics trees or the rocks until I am happy with the final finished scene. Bushes are spare Woodland Scenics ground foam, and the water is a sheet of plexiglass.

I built the watermill and the bridge from scratch using textured card stock paper, cutting the pieces with scissors, assembled with glue and Scotch tape, and weathered them using acrylic paint.


In this picture I recreated the scene for Percy's Ghostly Trick episode, using a large office light with a blue fluorescent bulb for the moonlight, and a small LED light taped inside the watermill to light the interior. I made the window panes from scratch, with clear plastic for the window glass so I could make this beautiful effect for this scene.


I also made these figures and the boat from scratch! The boat is also paper card, cut and glued into the hull shell, with strips cut for the seats, rudder, and separate oars. You can see how I made the figures here.


This was one of my favorite scenes on the Thomas show, and it wasn't to difficult to model. It took me about a half and hour to set everything up, and then I filmed the scenes I wanted to capture from the episodes. It is really fun to learn how the modelling team on the Thomas show made their sets, and it is great practice as a model railroader, too.

My Workbench

To keep interest going for my blog, I am going to post pictures and sketches of my old model railroad and some plans for future projects. I know that fans comment on how much they like the tests and sets I have made on my YouTube channel, so I hope you come and see my ideas and tips on a daily/weekly basis, and enjoy the pages you see and read!



Here is a picture I took of my work space in my room, for creating art for college and my scale modeling! You can see Sir Handel, a Knapford goods shed, some freshly painted freight cars, and other projects I have done for the past few years.

Pictured are also the common tools I use:
  • a cutting mat
  • pencils
  • craft knife and Atlas track knife
  • scissors
  • rulers and templates
  • Scotch tape, white glue and Crazy glue
  • acrylic paint
  • technical pencil and pencil lead
  • gel pens
  • pencil sharpener
 You can see the posts I have in order of my projects in the Workbench pages I have at the top of the blog panel, check them out to see the engines buildings and other cool stuff made!

More posts coming soon.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

A Bio and a Hobby

Both Thomas and Disney opened a huge door for me to become inspired to be an artist. For as long as I can remember, I have always loved to draw, create toys and models out of paper, and read.  Every day, I am constantly making art for art college and trying to develop my skills after my scholastic requirements, hoping that someday my creativity will spark in a professional arena, and continue doing what I am very good at, in a beneficial manner. I go to M.I.C.A. (the Maryland Institute College of Art), where I'm earning a Bachelor's degree in Animation.

I had to have a room with a model layout where I like to film my Thomas trains.  My father and I painted the walls as landscape backdrops, so the scenes in photos looked realistic.  All of the buildings are made of textured card-stock, and the figures are made of oven-baked clay, which I individually sculpted myself. They are tiny!

A reconstructed picture from "Cranky Bugs," from my layout back in the day!
Here is a photo I took while I was filming for my home made version of a Thomas episode, "Cranky Bugs," back in 2008. The characters are Bachmann models, with a few Bachmann Branchline wagons, but the figures, buildings, and even the loads I assembled from scrap kits are created by myself. As of course there is no way of getting store-bought models of every single building from the show, I trained myself as a model railroader how to construct them from scratch.

Studying from videos, I reconstruct locations of the Island for episodes I'm trying to capture.


This is the best part: to add a personal touch, I work from scenes both from the television episodes and from illustrations of the original "Railway Series" written by the Rev. W. Awdry. There is so much material that hasn't been covered that I really enjoy modelling, such as the sheds, warehouses or villages. Then I make them as card-stock scale model structures to film on my layout.

But I can't keep each scene forever! Everything is reconstructed from scratch.

For example, say I want to film Brendam Docks:


I have a 4' x 8' table with a piece of 1" thick foam the same dimensions. I construct all of the buildings or objects I need for the location, like the ship and warehouses. I paint the freight cars and tack, then weather them.


The foam allows me to pin the Atlas track securely into place with no glue, then loosely ballast them.


Then I film using a digital camera the scenes I want to make, with the white light that comes through the room's windows for the day, then at night there is a large lamp with a blue bulb with any additional lights for sets and buildings.

Then, (brace yourself!), I tare the whole model set down and start again with a new location.

Ugh, WHY? You might ask?

Well, this gives me the freedom to change the layout in anyway I wish, without everything being permanent. Then if I find something new that I haven't noticed while studying Thomas before, I can reconstruct the set one again. I also didn't have the space or provision to build and store "complete" model railroad sets or a huge house layout, so it actually is a benefit to me to work this way.


For the next scene, if I was to make countryside scenes, I use my quilts spread out over the table, with anything from boxes and planks of wood to make hills or mountains. I could also pluck the bases of the Woodland Scenic Trees and pluck them back on from underneath the quilt. I try to arrange them for perspective aids, to guide the eye round the set where the engines travel (art aesthetics!)

So, why do I do this?


This whole phenomenon grew as a hobby for me as I always loved trains and to make things. Thomas has always been my favorite character to watch and read about, and I really enjoy the reward I receive from improving my model-making skills for school and for my hobby.


I wouldn't have been able to produce such beautiful objects such as this. On my desk is a fishing trawler I made for a family member. Modeling Thomas has giving me a foundation for making my own things as well. It is such a cool feeling seeing what I make that I thought I never could have created before.


Oh, yes, and I wouldn't have been able to make this either! More on Skarloey and Sodor's Narrow Gauge Engines later!

Until next time!

An Introduction

Welcome to Sudrian Railway Modelling! This is the first time I have used blogger, so I want to open up with a little background.

My name is Stephen. I am an artist, and I love trains!

I grew up watching Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends, which inspired me to explore the world of railroads and model railroading. Since I was little I tried making locomotives, buildings and ships out of card-stock from the Thomas show and later railroad and real life related structures and railways.

This blog showcases projects and work from my hobby of scale modeling.  I will also post Thomas episodes and links I think every Thomas fan should see, as well as news and info of railways too. Soon I will be posting links to my home made Thomas episodes as well, as I used to make them a few years ago I wish to share on YouTube. More on that later!

So railway fans and artists, I hope this blog, which is just the beginning as I am learning how to use it, will interest and inspire you to check it out from time to time, and motivate you to create and rise in your own potential from my story. Stay Tuned!