Skip to main content

Strange title, no?  I got the idea once to take a side photo of a baggage car, reduce it to the right size, print it on photo paper, and cut out the portion between the upper and lower body lines to affix it to another car.  The reason for this great experiment was that no baggage car was made for my particular passenger set.

 

It worked pretty well but for two problems.  At the ends it drooped down slightly, because of the round camera lens.  I know that photographers have a term for this; I don't.

 

But the killer was the color match.  Being silver, I guess the computer thought that was a metal and not a color. No amount of tweaking the color would make it come close, so I was wondering if any of you have done something similar with colors from the color wheel.

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I did something somewhat like that.  The motel below is color printed image repeated multiple times for the many rooms and glued to foamboard.  The roof is similarly an image of shingles glued to thing carstock, etc.  The restaurant next door (to the left) is similarly done with images. I think it is an idea that has a lot of merit when the third dimension in the detail, which is lacking, won't be noticed.  it certainly can be fast to complete.

Motel

Attachments

Images (1)
  • Motel

It's called lens distortion and it's because you are not always taking a photo from directly in front of and at the same height as your subject. Photoshop and other software can adjust for this with their lens correction option, but the results depend on how bad the distortion is.

 

It can also be vigneting because you are too close to the box car and the outer edges of the shot tax the round lens at its outer radius.

Yes, I have with the inspiration of an article by Fred Dole in one of the train magazines. And yes, the hardest thing to do is to get a match of the color on your computer with the paint color of the train car. It takes some patience and a lot of tinkering.

 

Black is obviously the easiest to match and my first project was making a Procor tank car from a Lionel 3-dome traditionally sized model. The decals simply do not exist for making such a car, so I tried the paper technique and am real happy with the way it came out. This car worked well because of the placement of the rivets in the car, I was able to make 2 rectangular areas where the lettering would be and to glue those to the spaces on the tank car, so that no visable edges of the paper show at all.

 

I've also done a Norfolk Southern engine. Here there are decals, but getting the correct size from the decals was another issue, so I did it myself. Here's a case where upon close inspection, you will notice the areas of which the hearld and lettering are. But again, with a black locomotive, it is really only evident upon close inspection. You certainly would never notice it watching the train working on the layout.

 

I've done a couple of CP Rail box cars out of the K-Line 5000-series cars (the former Marx type). I mixed decals with the black/white hearld which I made on the computer to get the size precisely right.

 

Stepping up another level, I did a Conrail unit in this method and after a good deal of tinkering, managed to get the color on the paper nearly perfect. Enough so to make me happy and encourage me to try some more projects like this.

 

This works fine for me, being an 027 operator, because I am not a rivet counter. Whether such results would please a true prototypical scale operators is another matter.

 

I prefer to use decals, and like Microscale the very best. But it is getting SO MUCH harder to find decals now because they do not sell enough in O scale, so they are not being made (SO forget it all you folks who hope for unpainted cars from the train makers... it's not gonna happen, not when thye biggest decal maker is dropping O scale decals in droves).

 

Luckily, because I am a semi-scale 027 operator, I've been able to cob HO decals meant for larger cars or engines and use those on the smaller kinds of 3-rail trains I run. Still, there are gaps in this between what I want to repaint and what I can find decals for. Hence my desire to begin experimenting with making paper sides for some cars and engines.

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×