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With a few of you posting updates on your layout builds and some incorporating water scenes....you all have inspired me to dust off the water on my layout and start looking at beginning the process of adding detail.  So....while running trains this evening I got on my computer and looked up a few pictures I have taken over the past few years and thought I would share them since we have quite a few new folks on the forum that may be thinking about this topic.  Thanks for looking!

Alan

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Last edited by leavingtracks
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Thanks again guys!  Of course the idea of using shower door glass was not originally mine.  I saw it used years ago by several HO modelers and then more recently by Dennis. 

Marty....I had to go through the line MANY times to keep up with guys like you and others on this great forum!  Every once in a while I have to go through again for a booster shot...LOL!!

Alan

I thought I  would  provide a little history to expand upon what Alan said above. In the Lionel 1950's paper back book, Model Railroading, a suggested way to create water was to: "Get a piece of heavy gauge glass glass and paint the underside or a paper underlay with blues streaked with white."  John Allen used a clear sheet of glass over a cut out above a detailed lake or river bottom.  In my research, the only published use of shower door glass that I have found was mentioned in a layout article in the January 1989 Rallroad Model Craftsman  magazine written by Phil Chiavera. He used a neighbor's cast off shower doors painted green on the reverse side.

So, while I don't claim to have originated the idea of using shower door glass for water, I believe I'm the first one to provide a complete "How to" in my book, "Realistic Modeling For Toy Trains-A Hi-Rail Guide" which has popularized its present use.

 

Last edited by DennisB

Again...thanks for the replies and questions!

Coach Joe...yes, I used untempered glass so that it could be cut to fit the area that I needed covered.  I ordered it from my local glass shop as they only had tempered shower door glass in stock.  It only took a couple of days for it to arrive...

Dennis...thanks for chiming in here...I was hoping you would do so as your application of the technique is absolutely first rate!

Joe S...I actually used smooth masonite on the layout surface, which I painted, and then set the glass upon.  I felt it made the "water" look just a little deeper...  I went to my local Lowes and looked at the paint samples finding one that resembled a color I wanted and just had some paint mixed to that color. 

Thanks!

Alan

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