Yes, I was aiming for a dull blue, and I wasn't expecting to get as nice a blue as I did to be honest.
I have a coach top replacement for a standard troublesome truck chassis printing overnight
I have a
website where I have been writing about and photographing many of the sets and pieces that I find interesting.
Hi Da-lag
What about using clay to sculpt a face and then let it harden. I am not a crafter but there must be some cheap modeling clay that is easily sculpted and that hardens....or am I a dreamer?
There's Milliput if you can get a hold of it. That's what I used when I tried to sculpt a face.
Modeling the LNER (and some Thomas stuff) in OO Scale.
Can Milliput be easily sculpted like clay without the need for sanding after it hardens?
That's not the problem; I already have air drying clay and even the "white" variant is actually a light grey, but what I want to do is produce faces that look very much like their counterparts from the filmed and CGI seasons (especially when I have no suitable source face). I used to use paper cut outs by themselves, which obviously doesn't sit well with the plastic faces on unchanged models. When I made new customs after the collection reunion, I decided to try and trace with hot melt glue to make the faces stand out. It worked alright for four characters but became frustrating when I tried my first one for an engine, so it might just be the methods I'm using.
Either way, I've started trying to build the first version of my improvised Henry, which is also proving quite difficult and not very robust at the moment. It might be better to bring the Spencer chassis inside and test fit while building instead of strictly relying on Gordon. He will naturally have the same design flaw as the 2012 version where the firebox is too wide and blocks out the cab, though I hope to get around it in some way.
Very imaginative use of cardboard Da-lag. Do you think adding glue to those thin strips on the sides would stiffen up the cardboard at all?
I'm not sure about glue on its own, but I cut the same skewer used to strengthen Toby's new sideplates and glued two strips on the running board (on the inside).
Unfortunately, I didn't bother to check if Spencer still worked until now and it turned out he doesn't (not even the usual tricks helped). That's right - what I thought was going to be a fun idea essentially went to waste for me. My only other two TOMY flat drives are Ben's and Emily's, and that makes me doubt even they still run. I guess even the old flat drives don't last as long as the "Thomas type".
Thats a shame. Are you not willing to take it apart to see if you can't get it to work? Have you tried the 9 volt battery trick?