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Grouse Knowl Fold


Stabliofarmer

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  • 1 month later...
  • 4 weeks later...

Love the byre with the missing render and green water stains running down the wall and all the troughs and water bowls. Ours no longer has cattle tied up in it, but it's not that many years since it did. There was quite a lot of work mucking them out twice a day and feeding them, but it was always warm inside when you slid the door open on a cold winters morning, and the water pipes never froze! Really looking forward to seeing it at Penrith James.:)

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Looking excellent James. Like john, it wasn't that many years back our heifers were tied up over winter. I don't mean to pile the pressure on but I'm looking forward to seeing it finished at Penrith too. ;)

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Thanks very much guys, I think it should be complete for Penrith, toytracs the more questionable one!

57 minutes ago, Tractorman810 said:

do you have any plans for muck on the floor

I've yet to decide whether the shippon will be in use or not. The farm is based in the present day so you wouldn't really find six milkers in there but fancy having a few beef in it. Or then have it derelict and filled with dust covered junk. So not sure wether to cover the floor in muck.

There will be areas where I need muck though, its not something ive researched yet but the idea in my head is tile grout, brown paint, ground coffee and gloss varnish for abit of shine, mixed in with some chopped sisal then dolloped on.

Only problem I can see is it being permanent. Could possibly make up some cow pats or sheets of it by spreading it over clingfilm and letting it dry then peeling of and laying where needed.

Edited by Stabliofarmer
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  • 1 month later...

Looking very well James, lovely work, your talent is certainly not limited to trucks! Just wondering, did you make the sofa? If so, you might have been able to save yourself some time, but only if you're quick,........apparently DFS has a sale on!;):D

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Thanks timms

Clutter added to the bottom floor, and doors and windows sorted, fronts foxed shut, rear is posable as open or shut as I have a few scenes planned that need it open. Just lighting to add then I can seal it all up.

 

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Rear doors are plasticard in its natural finish, front is cereal card with a light coat of brown acrylic.

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Roofing

The barn is roofed in Yorkshire Falgstone Slates which I needed to replicate in miniature. This was done using mountboard. First it was cut into rectangles of decreasing sizes as the slates get smaller the further up the roof they get. Then the edges where trimmed to round them off.

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Slates aren't a continuous thickness so some more work was needed to get the right look. Using a craft knife I peeled the edges, weathing them and adding in the appearance of layers like real slates.

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With the slates now ready they can be layed just like the real thing. For the barn I want the roof to be removable so a border is fitted around the roof lines (painted black) with a lip underneath that the main roof sheet (white in the photo), again made of mountboard sits ontop of. Slates are then glued to the main sheet, overlapping the border.

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This is built up along the whole roof. When reaching the top it was necessary to put a shim of cereal card inplace to glue the top layer of slates too, as otherwise they would be glued to the border and the roof wouldn't be removable.

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Paint is next. A liberal coat of Reeves Naples Yellow Acrylic was added, and to get the gritty texture of sandstone tile grout was sprinkled on and blended in while wet.

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The paint now needs weathering, to do this I apply two washes of black acrylic, watered down by about 50% and really scrubbed on with a paintbrush so that only a thin layer is applied. Making sure that all the cracks and crevices are highlighted by the black.

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The finished product is light and to a level of realism I'm happy with. The next challenge is how to do the ridge stones in a way that they are fixed to the roof line, while blending in with the two removable panels. DAS clay seems the best option at the moment.

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Edited by Stabliofarmer
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very nice mate, some effort gone into it and it shows with the finish

on the ridge tiles ,would it be possible to make a v shape tile, fix it to one half,which in turn overlaps the other side, sure mount board would glue ok ? given its got a gap between both halfs,maybe a strip of balsa or similar to strenghten the v which sits in the grove ,does that make sence 

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