I’ve been relatively successful at painting mountain scape
backdrops. The “townscape” backdrops present
a far more difficult challenge.
Of course, the obvious solution would be a photographic mural behind the entire railroad. There are two problems with this approach. If I was modeling “today” it would be relatively simple matter to go to Vermont and take photos as needed. But I’m not modeling today – and while things change slowly in New England, they do indeed change, meaning contemporary photos are filled with structures, signs, vehicles, road markings, and a myriad of other details considerably different now than they were then. Secondly, while a full photographic backdrop (think wallpaper) may well look more realistic, I have a large layout – and the cost of such a backdrop would be prohibitive. The last quote I got to print one from my own artwork came close to what we spent on a 10-day vacation to London. Christine is very, very supportive of the hobby – but somehow I think her response would be “figure out another way to get from here to there.” Frankly, I wouldn’t blame her.
I suppose I could use photographs in the town and paint the open country backdrops. But that would look inconsistent to my eyes. Then there’s the question of blending – it would look weird to my eye to have photographs behind the towns, but painted mountainsides everywhere else. I first tried cutting the buildings out of photos, removing the inappropriate elements in Photoshop before pasting the buildings and streets to the wall. I soon found the lighting on the photos I used from Google maps washed out several elements – primarily the church steeple. Also the trees in the photo had already dropped their leaves – a plus since I plan to model Essex as leafless, but cutting around the tops of trees created a very obvious seam between the painted wall “sky” and photograph treeline.
Of course, the obvious solution would be a photographic mural behind the entire railroad. There are two problems with this approach. If I was modeling “today” it would be relatively simple matter to go to Vermont and take photos as needed. But I’m not modeling today – and while things change slowly in New England, they do indeed change, meaning contemporary photos are filled with structures, signs, vehicles, road markings, and a myriad of other details considerably different now than they were then. Secondly, while a full photographic backdrop (think wallpaper) may well look more realistic, I have a large layout – and the cost of such a backdrop would be prohibitive. The last quote I got to print one from my own artwork came close to what we spent on a 10-day vacation to London. Christine is very, very supportive of the hobby – but somehow I think her response would be “figure out another way to get from here to there.” Frankly, I wouldn’t blame her.
I suppose I could use photographs in the town and paint the open country backdrops. But that would look inconsistent to my eyes. Then there’s the question of blending – it would look weird to my eye to have photographs behind the towns, but painted mountainsides everywhere else. I first tried cutting the buildings out of photos, removing the inappropriate elements in Photoshop before pasting the buildings and streets to the wall. I soon found the lighting on the photos I used from Google maps washed out several elements – primarily the church steeple. Also the trees in the photo had already dropped their leaves – a plus since I plan to model Essex as leafless, but cutting around the tops of trees created a very obvious seam between the painted wall “sky” and photograph treeline.
Prototype scene. Note how overexposed the church steeple is in this image.
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Bernie Kempinski had run into a similar situation when he
did a module depicting Alexandria, Va., in the pre-Civil War years for a local
museum. Obviously there were no color photos. His solution was to draw the
structures in Adobe Illustrator, colorize them, cut them out and paint the rest
of the backdrop. Although it isn’t as “realistic” as a photograph, it is
remarkably effective. So he volunteered to head away from DC on Inauguration
Day to help me with the Essex Junction backdrops using the same basic approach.
He started by adjusting the angle of the main elements – the store, church, and house – to match the angle where the road meets the wall on my layout. Then he traced over the photo in Illustrator to create the basic outline of the buildings. Once they were in place we dug out some vintage photos of this street in Essex to fill in the details that have changed over the years such as the arrangement of windows, doors, and various roof materials.
He started by adjusting the angle of the main elements – the store, church, and house – to match the angle where the road meets the wall on my layout. Then he traced over the photo in Illustrator to create the basic outline of the buildings. Once they were in place we dug out some vintage photos of this street in Essex to fill in the details that have changed over the years such as the arrangement of windows, doors, and various roof materials.
This photo shows an early “sketch” (the structures are not complete) temporarily tacked to the wall.
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Before he left for the day he had added some details to the buildings and "tweaked" a few minor details. He then sketched a version with a road
and some trees (plan is to actually paint the trees on the final version).
These quick sketch trees are meant to help compose the scene:
I think a couple of things will work in my favor here.
First of all, the left side of the backdrop shown here will be masked with a 3D
“half model” of the old store that was just south of the trainshed (represented
by a temporary red mockup in the photos), meaning we only have to really hide
one joint. The other thing working in our favor is the scale of the elements,
which isn’t really obvious in the close up pictures. The tip of the church
steeple is about 6” above the layout surface and the benchwork is about 32”
deep.
The Illustrator "sketched" buildings aren't as realistic as photographs, but they don't have to be. This is how the backdrop image looks from the aisle.
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Once all the 3D scenery and buildings are installed I think the result
will be quite appealing. As Bernie and I discussed if it doesn’t work it’ll
take about 10 seconds to erase it with some paint and start over.
But did I eat my whole sandwich?
ReplyDeleteAs I recall you'd eaten lunch on the way over here and your mother was about to start cooking when she arrived....
ReplyDelete