When we went through there, it took me a while to figure out here the conductor's "Sant Ya Sant" was.
Steamtrains Wrote:BR60103 Wrote:When we went through there, it took me a while to figure out here the conductor's "Sant Ya Sant" was.
And what is it..?? :?
Sainte Hyacinthe. :mrgreen:
Very nice work and really effective use of backdrop photos. Well done!
Wayne
It's always nice to see picture of your layout. Nothing is overdone, just your casual countryside railroading at it's best.
BTW, you really captured well the feeling of this part of Quebec, everything is easily recognizeable.
Matt
Quote:Very nice work and really effective use of backdrop photos. Well done!
Wayne
Thank you Wayne. It is by scenicking backdrop
Quote:It's always nice to see picture of your layout. Nothing is overdone, just your casual countryside railroading at it's best.
BTW, you really captured well the feeling of this part of Quebec, everything is easily recognizeable.
Matt
Thank you Matt. C'est gentil. Much more to be done , however it's coming along
Railfanning the layout before scenery work this fall/winter
Ste-Rosalie (east of St-Hyacinthe) an agricultural area with its silo etc.
Railfanning - further along eastward - Drummondville
Basic scenery in place. Now working on structure etc.
Backtracking a little - between Ste-Rosalie and St-Hyacinthe - rolling stock along the way
In the weeds awaiting next assignments..........
.........crew change
Silently rusting away..........
First layer of scenery in place
Construction - structure- for the recycling depot
That is about it for now
Thanks for looking
MLW Wrote:.........crew change
The windows in that van look pretty heavily fogged - - - - -
Was that crew ? r e a l l y ?
changing ?
If you hadn't done such a beautiful job with the scenery, and background " merge " I might never have noticed the Van's windows ----------- the clue ? couldn't see the scenery behind the van, through the windows.
[[ To build nice models, we train ourselves to be aware of the smallest details, and try to replicate them in a scene. It does, however, eventually make the eye far too "critical".]]
On the other hand, I guess my "eye" hasn't lost any of its ability over the years.......I can keep on building models.