The Incandescent Lamp Electric Company's building had a long loading dock. I thought it would look great set against the straight part of the outer track loop.
Flat means flat! |
Fortunately, building out the dock wasn't a difficult task or even an especially lengthy one.
Gathering the resources
I did two sets of image/mirror image. |
The paper printouts needed mounting. I had several scrap pieces of hardware store rulers, which turned out to be the perfect backing material. The rulers were the same height as the dock image.
The dock addition is basically just a small rectangular box. I cut all the pieces to fit, and then glued the paper dock images to them.
The overlap from the sides cover the wood backing of the front. |
Building the base
The joints were constructed carefully. On the sides of the dock, I trimmed the paper so it overhung the wood back by 1/4". This covered the exposed wood of the dock front.I also glued a small block at each corner. These ensured the joins were truly square. And they provided additional strength to the joint.
The finished box. Note the corner braces don't exend all the way up. That space will be needed for the next step. |
If the side had been really long, I would have needed a different solution, as the mirroring would have been obvious. But for a 1-1/2" section with limited visibility, I think this works.
It's the same technique I used before in Part One.
Creating the dock floor
There are score lines on this surface -- really! |
I scored board patterns into the surface. They don't show that well in the photos. But in real life, they provide a realistic texture to the Foamore's surface.
I also carefully notched the underside of the dock floor. I wanted it to sit flush on the dock. The finished piece fit so snugly I didn't need to glue it at all.
I had plenty of the image left to experiment with. The loading dock has grayed wooden bumpers on it.
I mixed white and black paint together to match that shade of gray. The simplest way to test the mix was to dab it onto the scrap image.
When the paint blended seamlessly with the image, I was ready to paint the dock floor.
Paint-matching was easy. I had plenty of printed images to test with. |
I'm happy with the result. The building looks like it belongs in the space I did need to shift the flat I had previously built. And while that all looked fine, the American Flyer station that occupied that corner looked a little crowded.
That's something I'll need to address.
Another time.
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