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Thursday, January 12, 2017

Mountains

As spline roadbed has started to wind itself through the (nonexistent, yet) hills of the Cascades, time waiting for glue to dry has been filled with a multitude of tasks from tuning turnouts, building turnouts, wiring, and most recently an endeavor into backdrop painting.

As previously mentioned, the weather inspiration for the Cascade Subdivision is a chilly, rainy spring day, and to begin to capture this effect, I needed a rainy gray sky to fit the bill.  Studying prototype photos, I found that the color of the clouds is closer to an off-white than a gray and the color chip that matched was aptly called "Evaporation."

I started small with the backdrops on the middle level of the helix, a place with dense trees and tunnels, but small areas that could offer a peak at a hidden vista depending on the viewing angle. The goal was simply to give the impression of distant hills and trees, not to accurately paint each tree individually. Working with cheap acrylic craft paints and my sky color, I worked to paint the distant hills first, then moving into the foreground, paying close attention to color and shape.







 Note: Foreground scenery will fill in where I have not painted and I will document my various methods of hiding the backdrop in the future.

1 comment:

  1. John,

    Looking good! A simple backdrop can be quite effective, as you are demonstrating. Add some overcast and you will have it!

    Bill Decker

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