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I started in the layout design forum, but since initial design and construction are done, it is time to move to the scenery forum.  I live in Anchorage Alaska, and when MTH released the passenger cars and engines in the Alaska line, I made the switch from N gauge to O.  I am modeling (somewhat loosely) the line from Potter Marsh to Portage with major scenicing areas of Potter Marsh, the Seward highway along the inlet to Girdwood, and the Wildlife center at Portage.  I have used commercial backdrops in the past, but really wanted to incorporate my own photography this time.  I went out to Potter Marsh last weekend and took some pictures--of course it is difficult getting the scenes to line up, but not to shabby--I like it so far--

backdrop [1 of 1)

My highway is coming along too

Road construction [1 of 1)

Once October comes around the landscape/scenery work will pick up.

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A mix.  There is a local shop that carries O, and it does specialize in carrying anything Alaska.  I purchased my MTH passenger cars from them, but they did not have an SD-70 or GP 40 in stock, so I mail ordered those.  Also, they did not have the DCS control system, so that was mail ordered.  Coal cars from Menards was too good a deal to pass up, so mail order on that.  I was able to get almost all of my track from the local shop, but I did mail order some switches.  I try to do what I can with the local shop.  Shipping costs fro O scale equipment can get expensive fast, but the occasional free shipping specials can even that out.  Even my photo developing was mail order since I wanted 24x36 prints (I can get 20x30 local no problem at Costco). 

I still have a fair number of Alaska locomotives and rolling stock items that I am planning to sell, so get in touch if there's something you might be looking for. Most are MTH PS2. Still very much like the Alaska RR, but have had to pare-down my inventory to something a bit more manageable and am pretty much sticking with U.S. Army Transportation Corps as a theme.

 

Bubbles and wrinkles are messaged out of the first two panels--still need to work on the corner photo some.   Also started to spray in foam for the mountains.  I will keep building them up, then they get shaped, plaster cloth, plaster (joint compound), colored, and of course miscellaneous brush, treesbackdrop 3 [1 of 1)

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Work has been a bit slow the past month or so--new pump in the septic lift station, demolition and rebuild of the tile surround in the secondary bath, and the whole end of summer/start of winter changeover chores kept me busy.  I have been working on my mountain range--lots of spray expandable foam and lightweight spackle serve to build up a large area with not a lot of weight.

mountain maiking

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I've had a hard time getting back in sync with this forum since our road trip to Nova Scotia in August, too many other things to do, So, I've only been reading threads I've been subscribed to and completely missed that you moved to the Scenery forum. The layout is really looking good and I'm looking forward to following your progress and seeing more photos.

Last edited by DoubleDAZ

      Looking really good Orind.  Capturing the look and feel of Turnagain Arm.

      I've been along that stretch a few times. I live in Wasilla myself.

      You'll need a few sheep on the mountains and Orcas along the waters edge.

                                                                                                       Dan

I really like the way that you captured the "grayness" of everything. When I first started to research Alaska, I noticed that there wasn't a lot of brown. The streams and rivers even have a gray mixed in with the beautiful blue from the glacial silt (there's a cool scientific name for it).

Are the trees spruce? I have been trying to identify the most prodigious trees. They seem to have that thin look.

The layout is only going to look better as you continue. Nice work! Your vision is coming to life.

Black spruce trees is our main spruce--that and Birch trees.  The back spruce tends to be really tall and thin because of the density of trees, but if you thin it out and give them room, they can develop nicely.   I placed one of the sheep next to a passenger figure I have--yep, sheep are just way to large (and too well fed).  Interestingly, the moose I also ordered (same scale) are correctly sized.  I guess I could go with a "chemical spill" type scene and have mutant sheep--Nah/baah.

Moonman posted:

I really like the way that you captured the "grayness" of everything. When I first started to research Alaska, I noticed that there wasn't a lot of brown. The streams and rivers even have a gray mixed in with the beautiful blue from the glacial silt (there's a cool scientific name for it).

Funny you'd mention that, as I was in AK last year and on a White Pass train, a passenger from back East noticed how grey/subdued the ground really was in color:

 

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