The stone white castings were made from my rubber mould,that came into being using a small part of a flimsy castle wall for a make-shift pattern. Having gone through other moulding processes i see no dire need to show how that was accomplished as basics using Lego Bricks and Silicone has certainly been fully explained here within this open ended project before. In short,what is pushed in,there the impression remains.
This part deals with problem solving and therefore was lots of fun to do.
Each cast up wall was successful to a certain degree.
" Eh!"
However where they butt up to one another that straight piece of wall is eye distracting,and spoils the whole look i require. Action to rectify this was needed.
Sure plants could be stuck over this eyesore,as i have seen on many a layout,but there is always an easy pathway to follow to achieve a much better butt ending.That is if one has made the mould.
"First I`ll have a break before showing you that route i took.
"with bb`s apple turnover intermission at an end, it`s back to the topic.", said the little button that never speaks in capitals.
Plan A
At first i made a thin flat buttress, which came out well and would fit over that gap , however it threw out the spaced out measurements between the buttresses,and looked rather odd to the eye.
It also easily broke during trimming with a knife.
Therefore a full thick buttress was surely needed to get strength and uniformity into place.
Plan B
So I made two simple forms from scrap styrene sheet,and pinned them into place on the mould where both buttresses are,and this was so the castings were the same thickness of each wall when they were cast up. A longer styrene section was pinned into place across the wide open bottom of the rubber mould. For greater strength the pins were pushed in at an angle through the sheet and into the rubber. Thus it would resist the pressure caused by the Plaster of Paris pour.
Here is one i cast up earlier,and with the styrene flashings removed from either side, and having had a quick trimming it is ready to slot into place between those two supportive wall sections.
"That reminds us of the BBC`s Children program, Blue Peter!"
A great part of enjoying this part of the hobby is solving little problems to reach a satisfying better look to whatever it is one is making. Model figures and toys need props to aid the display of them,so Tutorials is wide open to anyone wishing to show early stages of their work.
It sliped into place just simply nice.
Thus the two walls are unified into one,and after the buttress is placed one at either end, yes two other wall sections can be pushed into place butting up to them. And so the repetition process of crisp and tidy can likewise continue on.
If you can remenber my unusual raised canal? These are the supporting walls for some of that. They will be siliconed into place on the Honey Well layout and hopefully will raise a few smiles along that round about way as the little trains pop in and out of the tunnels that were made last summer.
In the time being i need to make more walls and buttresses!
"lots and lots of them."
See you guys later. BB