Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Stephen Crawford drawings




Years ago a fellow contacted Bob Hayden and myself to show us his sketches of narrow gauge trains. He was a fan of the Thatcher's Inlet series that was appearing in RMC at the time. His name was Stephen Crawford.

He made a sketch of one of the little saddle tank engines on the dock on the TI module. I used the sketch as the lead picture for part three, I believe. That sketch no longer exists but the two above were rescued from a box of old photos I was going to throw away.

As happens in life we lost touch with Stephen years ago but his art lives on.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Making Clouds


I get a lot of requests for information about how I make the clouds on my scenic backdrops. Here's the process:

The background starts as hardboard, Masonite or Gator board that's been painted blue. I found the blue color by holding a paint chip up to the sky on a bright sunny day and matching colors.



Next, I paint the background as shown below.


I have three layers - the blue color at the top, blue mixed with white halfway down and white mixed with a little blue at the bottom. There are no formulas. I just mix white with blue and paint it on knowing that if it's too light or dark I can fix it in the next step.


Here I painted in the distant mountains and then blended everything together using an airbrush with the high volume tip and flat white indoor wall paint.

Now for the clouds.


I use the Miles Hale method (published many years ago in RMC) and cut stencils from poster board. These are held about 2" in front of the backdrop and clouds are lightly misted-in using a spray can of flat white paint.


Here are stencil clouds sprayed on a module backdrop. You'll notice I've used several different stencils and overlapped them to get an interesting effect.

Here's the completed scene with the clouds in the background. Have fun!