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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> A version with scratches on the tracks and the wheels.
uh, no (:-)). the rails ought to remain "shiny" I think, and wear perhaps show
on part of the wheel shoulders; the "rust" is excellent in parts. and, because
everyone's a critic, I'll point out that sleepers (the ones I know) aren't near
square, more like 2:1 width to height.
regards, jr.
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Op 25/09/2022 om 19:38 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> A version with scratches on the tracks and the wheels.
>
> uh, no (:-)). the rails ought to remain "shiny" I think, and wear perhaps show
> on part of the wheel shoulders; the "rust" is excellent in parts. and, because
> everyone's a critic, I'll point out that sleepers (the ones I know) aren't near
> square, more like 2:1 width to height.
>
Well, the interesting thing is that the photograph Bald Eagle referred
to earlier, shows this kind of (micro) normals. I certainly overdid the
effect here ;-) more subbtle effect might be better...
Concerning the sleepers: perspective effect! ;-) They are rectangular in
cross-section.
--
Thomas
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Op 25/09/2022 om 18:04 schreef Alain Martel:
> The dormers are usually much darker. After all, those are normally
> soaked in creosote for several weeks before use.
Agreed. I have difficulty to get the right shade here within the isowood
facility. Up to now, my attempts were not convincing enough. I shall
continue tweaking.
--
Thomas
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Le 2022-09-26 à 02:23, Thomas de Groot a écrit :
> Op 25/09/2022 om 18:04 schreef Alain Martel:
>> The dormers are usually much darker. After all, those are normally
>> soaked in creosote for several weeks before use.
>
> Agreed. I have difficulty to get the right shade here within the isowood
> facility. Up to now, my attempts were not convincing enough. I shall
> continue tweaking.
>
Start with a dark brown base. ALL the sleepers that I ever saw where
dark brown to black.
With isowood, you can use a plain unpatterned pigment.
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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> ...
> > square, more like 2:1 width to height.
> Concerning the sleepers: perspective effect! ;-) They are rectangular in
> cross-section.
perspective, huh? :-) (still think they look quite tall)
> Well, the interesting thing is that the photograph Bald Eagle referred
> to earlier, shows this kind of (micro) normals. I certainly overdid the
> effect here ;-) more subbtle effect might be better...
would that be more noticeable where there would be less mechanical wear?
regards, jr.
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Op 26/09/2022 om 19:57 schreef jr:
> hi,
>
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> ...
>>> square, more like 2:1 width to height.
>
>> Concerning the sleepers: perspective effect! ;-) They are rectangular in
>> cross-section.
>
> perspective, huh? :-) (still think they look quite tall)
>
An image telling more than any text... [attached image]
>
>> Well, the interesting thing is that the photograph Bald Eagle referred
>> to earlier, shows this kind of (micro) normals. I certainly overdid the
>> effect here ;-) more subbtle effect might be better...
>
> would that be more noticeable where there would be less mechanical wear?
>
Where would that be? the whole (?) polished part of the track is subject
to mechanical wear...
In any case, this is not so important imo. Hyperrealism is not my goal
(never was). ;-)
--
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'rt_system_demo1.png' (264 KB)
Preview of image 'rt_system_demo1.png'
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I guess I am about done concerning sleepers, rail tracks, and trolley
textures. Here a view of those changes.
--
Thomas
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Attachments:
Download 'the shallows i_test5.jpg' (124 KB)
Preview of image 'the shallows i_test5.jpg'
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Specially for jr ;-)
The sleeper at the origin is Friedrich Lohmueller's original CSG version
as comparison. The others are isowood versions.
--
Thomas
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'track_sleeper building.jpg' (59 KB)
Preview of image 'track_sleeper building.jpg'
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hi,
Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Specially for jr ;-)
</grin>
> The sleeper at the origin is Friedrich Lohmueller's original CSG version
> as comparison. The others are isowood versions.
thank you. fwiw, if the centre one's colour had a smidgen more "creosote"..
> > would that be more noticeable where there would be less mechanical wear?
> Where would that be? the whole (?) polished part of the track is subject
> to mechanical wear...
from the mannequin's POV, along the top-outside-corner of each rail, that is,
I'd expect most wear on the inner "edges" due to the wheel shape.
> I guess I am about done concerning sleepers, rail tracks, and trolley
> textures.
damn. I was about to suggest the cab should be in "British Racing Green" with
gold trim ;-).
regards, jr.
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"jr" <cre### [at] gmailcom> wrote:
> from the mannequin's POV, along the top-outside-corner of each rail, that is,
> I'd expect most wear on the inner "edges" due to the wheel shape.
It's an interesting thing, those train wheels:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7h4OtFDnYE
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