Garage in your neighborhood...yeah right...its your house dude, just come clean. Since you blew all your money on Sierrawest Kits, this is all you could afford...its ok man.
Lol...forgot the mention last time but your red walls looking good. The other thing I will do to tone down the red is to apply a light coat of a Gray Stain from someone like Hunterline.
I agree - good tutorial. To tell you the truth, I personally liked the coloring before the dusting. It matches up better with the picture you are using as a guide. I like toning down things, but sometimes I overdo it and take out some of the rich colors that can be achieved. Of course, this is my personal preference. Onward with the build!! Phil
I'm going to go with a bit more weathered than my prototype photo due to the fact this is the lower wall of a salvage yard. I've never seen a junkyard building that wasn't completely beat up.
I chewed up the board ends and the bottom of the wall a bit with a wire brush. I also wicked a bit of A&I up the boards to simulate moisture damage.
Steve, I've just been catching up on your build. You are doing a wonderful job on this kit. I also really love the shake shingles and concur with the other comments that you have really done a great job with them! I am also looking forward to your weathering/coloring of them.
I finished adding the siding to the walls this weekend. I also added the windows to the main building.
The bottom floor was built over studs, the second floor is done over cardstock. I follow the same method as the lower portion then I glued them together.
I framed out the windows.
I added the windows in place. I colored the windows a little different from the siding. Instead of using Brett's wet brushing method I use a stiff brush and use a blotting type technique to apply uneven paint. This kit does not have laser cut acetate for the windows so it took a little bit longer to add and detail all the glass.
Other side.
Close up of the window detail. It's difficult to see the cracks in the glass against the white background.
Here are all the walls side by side. It took a bit of effort to get the weathering even across all 4 walls.
I plan on having the doors wide open with some work being done inside the shed.
I made up a sign for the side wall to match the signs on O'Neills. My plan is to have evidence that the yard used to be Quincy Salvage but was purchased by the neighboring O'Neills Fabrication Co. I will probably make some signage labeled for Quincy's and add it to the trash pile behind one of the sheds as evidence of the renaming.
This is the sign I created. Let me know what you think. Nothing is glued down yet.
Steve, you are really getting a great look. I really like the sign and it blends nicely with the structure. I also like your window. You can tell you put a lot of work into them and you got a great look. Phil
It's time for my weekly update. I colored all the doors and glued them in place, added the signs and glued the walls together this weekend.
The door castings are white metal. To get them to blend with the rest of the siding I primed them with light tan camo spray, followed by 2 coats of a&i. I painted them with the same color as the walls only I dabbed paint on with a large stiff brush instead of brushing it on, this gave me a slightly inconsistent color. I followed everything with the same chalks I used to weather the walls.
All the signs were weathered with chalks. In the past I've used A&I to weather signs but it usually ends up making them more difficult to read.
This awning is a very cool detail. I will weather it a bit more once it dries completely. It's very fragile.
I glued the walls together.
This is one of my favorite parts of a kit, I get to start to see how everything looks together.
Thanks Bryan. I always like the look of matching doors and siding.
Thanks Brett. The signs are super high quality, very crisp and clear, nicest signage I've seen in a kit. The worst part is always the round ones for me, tough to cut clean.
Thanks Alan. I'm excited to get everything together and laid out.
I made a bit more progress today on the diorama. I got the small shed walls together, once I get all the main buildings completed I can get a much better idea how I will combine the 2 kits into one large diorama.
This is the front of the shed, I had a bit of tough time getting the door to match. I used 2 coats of A&I to color the wall boards. Once everything was together I dusted the whole thing with 408.3 mixed with a few other brown shades.
Rear wall. I plan on added some shelving/rack setup to the left of the door so I didn't detail the wall.
Left side wall. Hardest part for me is cutting the round signs out cleanly.
Close-up of the left wall.
Right side wall, I reused the stencil from O'Neills tank for this wall. I didn't spray it, I dabbed on Ivory craft paint with a stiff flat brush.
Close up of the lettering. I tried to go very light on the paint so the wood detail came through underneath. I will add some more detail to this wall, I just haven't figured it out yet.
Next step is the roof, I'm going to experiment a bit with this one. I want a very beat up old wood shingle roof.
Comments
I'm going to go with a bit more weathered than my prototype photo due to the fact this is the lower wall of a salvage yard. I've never seen a junkyard building that wasn't completely beat up.
I chewed up the board ends and the bottom of the wall a bit with a wire brush. I also wicked a bit of A&I up the boards to simulate moisture damage.
Let me know what you think.
-Steve
I'll probably add another wash to the bottom to darken it up a bit
-Steve
Bill
The bottom floor was built over studs, the second floor is done over cardstock. I follow the same method as the lower portion then I glued them together.
I framed out the windows.
I added the windows in place. I colored the windows a little different from the siding. Instead of using Brett's wet brushing method I use a stiff brush and use a blotting type technique to apply uneven paint. This kit does not have laser cut acetate for the windows so it took a little bit longer to add and detail all the glass.
Other side.
Close up of the window detail. It's difficult to see the cracks in the glass against the white background.
Here are all the walls side by side. It took a bit of effort to get the weathering even across all 4 walls.
I plan on having the doors wide open with some work being done inside the shed.
Thanks for checking in.
-Steve
It's Quincys made to look like the garage I live in.
-Steve
This is the sign I created. Let me know what you think. Nothing is glued down yet.
-Steve
It's time for my weekly update. I colored all the doors and glued them in place, added the signs and glued the walls together this weekend.
The door castings are white metal. To get them to blend with the rest of the siding I primed them with light tan camo spray, followed by 2 coats of a&i. I painted them with the same color as the walls only I dabbed paint on with a large stiff brush instead of brushing it on, this gave me a slightly inconsistent color. I followed everything with the same chalks I used to weather the walls.
All the signs were weathered with chalks. In the past I've used A&I to weather signs but it usually ends up making them more difficult to read.
This awning is a very cool detail. I will weather it a bit more once it dries completely. It's very fragile.
I glued the walls together.
This is one of my favorite parts of a kit, I get to start to see how everything looks together.
Thanks for checking in.
-Steve
Thanks Brett. The signs are super high quality, very crisp and clear, nicest signage I've seen in a kit. The worst part is always the round ones for me, tough to cut clean.
Thanks Alan. I'm excited to get everything together and laid out.
This is the front of the shed, I had a bit of tough time getting the door to match. I used 2 coats of A&I to color the wall boards. Once everything was together I dusted the whole thing with 408.3 mixed with a few other brown shades.
Rear wall. I plan on added some shelving/rack setup to the left of the door so I didn't detail the wall.
Left side wall. Hardest part for me is cutting the round signs out cleanly.
Close-up of the left wall.
Right side wall, I reused the stencil from O'Neills tank for this wall. I didn't spray it, I dabbed on Ivory craft paint with a stiff flat brush.
Close up of the lettering. I tried to go very light on the paint so the wood detail came through underneath. I will add some more detail to this wall, I just haven't figured it out yet.
Next step is the roof, I'm going to experiment a bit with this one. I want a very beat up old wood shingle roof.
Thanks for checking in.
-Steve
Bill
Thanks Bill