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Any hints on making a pine tree forest
- Mattias
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And thank goodness no camels either.
Are you sure? I know one living about 2 miles away from you, you´ll see why the next time you come .
Mattias
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- ron222
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- Kelley
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- ron222
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Are there any photos showing your full layout? Really like your style. Is there a best way to add snow to these trees? Thanks Ron
Socalz44 wrote:
Here is some of the 2000 trees I made using Loren's method. Jim
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- ron222
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- southernnscale
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- Fort Kent Dad
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Has anyone tried the trees for sale over a d'Bay - ebay that is. These one are 5cm high (too high for anything but big mountain trees), but they come in all sizes. These ones are $20 for 100 trees. Tempting if they are any good at all.
I've made a few trees for my N Scale Layout but I'm not satisified with my tree making skills - I need more practice.
I've found some things are a good deal down a d'Bay - but not so much with Zed where vendors seem to want full retail for everything - somethings you can buy from on-line retailers for the same or less. As I live in Canada it is actually cheaper to have things sent from China where they frequently offer free shipping than it is to import from the states where most vendors want to use US Priority Post which to Canada is expensive - and we get dinged a surcharge at our post office because the US post wants a signature returned to them so Canada Post charges the recipient a fee for that. If the parcels are sent ordinary first class post - then there is no surcharge and the rates are not so bad.
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- rvn2001
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- Zcratchman_Joe
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I disagree that a 5cm is too tall for anything but a mountainous area. A 5cm tree works out to about a 37 ½ foot tree. Way small for a lot of trees right outside my window and there are no mountains in sight. Heck the cottonwood trees over there by the tracks (again, outside my window) are close to 100 feet tall and I live in the middle of a large city.Fort Kent Dad wrote: ... These one are 5cm high (too high for anything but big mountain trees),...
The problem lies in the fact that a lot of people are used to seeing very small trees on layouts. I think people started using smaller trees because trees of a realistic height, look huge… while in reality trees ARE huge. The canopy of the large red maple directly in front of me would fill my side of the duplex I live in. Folks just don’t seem to notice their real surroundings much… or at least don’t get to look at it from a giants point of view and so reality can look out of proportion on a layout. I myself prefer trees of a realistic height/size. These 5cm trees would be just a bit on the small side for me.
Joe
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- On Track Hobbies
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We sell a tree making machine, the wire might be a light coarse for Z scale, it is by H & J Trains
We also sell a wide variety of pre-made trees suitable for Z scale
It may be purchased from www.ontrackhobbies.com
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- Guba
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- Fred
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- tealplanes
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I owe a couple of guys here some trees and they will get the first of the new crop coming out.
In regards to hair spray....that is all I've ever used, (the cheapest, extra hold, non scented if possible)from any grocery store.
In my technique I spray paint the tree armatures a brown or gray, (neither color is ideal) to cover the Chenille bump fibers. It really doesn't matter what color of bump one uses because the painting step covers well and then you are ready for the application of the ground foam. BTW, I do not use cheap spray paint because it seems to be very thin and not cover well. I guess the paint is the most expensive ingredient in my tree making. From a spray can of paint, one can spray several hundred trees of typical Z scale size.
I spray the tree armature with hair spray and immediately dip the armature or sprinkle the foam onto the armature, then lightly tap my fingers that are holding the armature and then spray the armature again to 'seal' the foam.
Once hair spray is dry, the foam is pretty well set. I've even gone over an area of finished forest and given the area a booster shot of spray for a little measure of 'upkeep'
This video is pretty well done and easy to understand. I think anyone trying to make trees will find the technique that works best for them.
I have made a fancy tree making machine that will produce up to 20 trees at a time if making short trees, but even the scale 100' trees I can get about 8 from one winding.
Maybe I should make a video of my technique and share. Karin made business cards for me and she named me 'The Fir Trader' Hmmmm........
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- pm-ger
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- Socalz44
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- tealplanes
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No matter what method you use, filling a forest is an act of time sacrifice.
"Fill the Forest" We should write a book Jim.
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- Zcratchman_Joe
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Loren, Hi;tealplanes wrote: ...but I think I can make them faster with my tree making machine.
Two questions.
1. Is there a video out there of you using your tree making machine (link please)? If not, you need to get busy and get one put together. I, for one, would love to see it in action and I’m sure many more would as well!
2. Has anyone that you know of put together a pine tree canopy for large areas? I’ve seen it done for other types of trees but not pines or furs.
Later,
Joe
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- southernnscale
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Yea! I Watch the video and it's was ok! but I think that Loren machine is a better design And you don't have to do all the wire rapping and since smaller trees he can do more at one time. I have tried making the trees with a household drill and a pair of pliers and it's a slow process but they turn out pretty nice. but with Loren's rig you don't have to hold the drill in one hand and the pliers with the other. here are some of my trees!
some of these trees where done with Chenille Stems Pump 15mm x12" 12 pieces in a pack each piece does 4 trees they are all ready twisted. they come in a variety of colors. I dry brush with the green color I want. As seen in the upper right side of photo. they look like cedar trees some have ground cover sprinkled on them.
These are done with twisted wire and placed in the end of some round stock wood to make the main part of the tree.
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- markm
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The conifers are typically 100-150' tall: pine, fir and cedar. Along a road cut, boardleaf trees and plants will grow in the sun. On the west coast, these are typically oak, madrone and manzanita. The last one is a red trunk with blue-green leaves that can add quite a bit of contrast.
In the image, the foreground trees are oak. Notice how dense the trees are in the image. Less than 50' form the first trees there are houses, a pool and a camp ground, but you can't tell looking through the trees.
When I modeled the forest, I used mostly the "bristle brush" trees from the German suppliers cut to a more irregular shape and coated with foam. I used more detailed trees along the cut, with8-10 board-leafs and painted wooden skewers to simulate the trunks of short trees you couldn't see the top of. Once I had the horizontal view dense enough, I added the background tree tops using the "brush" trees stuck into strips of Styrofoam painted forest colors, very much like using the lichen or man-made tufts used for modeling a dense deciduous forest.
Don't forget to add the forest litter: pine needles and broken limbs to the floor of the forest.
I'm modeling the temperate forests of California and Oregon, so you may want to research the area you want to model. Also if you're modeling a mining operation, there will be fewer larger trees, or any trees at all, depending how wood-hungry the mine was.
Hope this helps,
Mark
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