Jar lid dioramas
#1
Sometime back one of the forums had a "build a diorama in the lid off of a empty peanut butter jar" challenge. This is the one I built and it is N scale:


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Mike

Sent from my pocket calculator using two tin cans and a string
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#2
Thats too cool!!
Josh Mader

Maders Trains
Offering everyday low prices for the Model Railroad World
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#3
That is absolutely remarkable! You got so much into it and it tells a story. Nicely detailed too! Did you win?
Ralph
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#4
That is incredible! Nicely done!
-Dave
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#5
Very nicely done! Love all of your little details! Love the little story it tells. Great job. Thumbsup
Scott
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#6
Thanks folks! Ralph it was a challenge not a contest so there was no voting. The reason for that is some people won't enter/try if it's a contest and they don't feel like they can win. With the challenge we seem to get more entries.
Mike

Sent from my pocket calculator using two tin cans and a string
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#7
Oh, OK! That's true about non-voting challenges, they do make folks feel more comfortable about entering their work for viewing. The jar lid theme at first seems like such an unlikely way to model anything but now that I've seen what a creative mind can do I want to know what other ideas people came up with! Fun! Thumbsup

Ralph
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#8
Hi Ralph, you have already seen another one of their ideas with the "shoebox challenge" that I posted in the logging and mining forum. These type of challenges are fun and they give you a chance to try new ideas, techniques and maybe dabble in a different scale as I did with the shoebox. If we screw things up 35 there is next to no cost with these things so no harm done! Icon_lol
Mike

Sent from my pocket calculator using two tin cans and a string
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#9
:hey: "But you can't build anything, model railroading, in that small an area!!!!!"

Mike, I think you blew the lid off that one! 2296_

That's s w e e t Worship
We always learn far more from our own mistakes, than we will ever learn from another's advice.
The greatest place to live life, is on the sharp leading edge of a learning curve.
Lead me not into temptation.....I can find it myself!
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#10
Brilliant, well done Tyson Rayles.
I'm a big fan of microlayouts and dioramas.
It's amazing about what can fit in a few square inches.

:jawdrop:

Just running to the grocery store to get a jar of peanut butter.

Jacques
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#11
Thanks guys, glad you liked it!
Mike

Sent from my pocket calculator using two tin cans and a string
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#12
That is very creative!

How much weight did you need to add to the lid?
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#13
I remember that one Tyson!
Very cool! Thumbsup

Looks like that hopper took a long jump off a short track! Misngth
-Drew-
"Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly."
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#14
Awesome!

But how did you get it to balance?
Lead weights in the lid?
CANNONBALL
Baby likes to rock it like a boogie-woogie choo-choo train!
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#15
Hi guys and thanks for the kind words! The "earth" that overhangs the lid is made of blue stryofoam and there are no guts to the loco, the mechanism is in fact what powers my On18 loco although the bodies can be switched out, so there isn't really all that much weight to deal with. Three automotive stick-on wheel weights of one ounce each stuck to the bottom of the jar lid was all that was needed.
Mike

Sent from my pocket calculator using two tin cans and a string
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