In my previous posts here I have used "backscene" rather loosely, to refer to the physical backdrop panel or to its illustration. So I have edited several older posts today to clarify where I am writing about the backdrop. This satisfies the inner nerd even if no-one else ever noticed.
. . .
Too late, I realised a modular layout needs multiple backdrop panels, one for each permutation of modules. To make a start, I bought a full 2.4 x 1.2 metre sheet of hardboard, and the timber merchant cut this into four strips for me.
There are plenty of warnings about hardboard warping. The first panel is now four months old and has kept its flatness. The material seems to be okay if you prime both sides, and use the right stuff to do the priming. Rustin’s MDF sealer and a decorator’s acrylic primer/undercoat have been successful. What did not work at all well was to try diluted PVA glue on one of the backs. I might as well have put the board out into the rain. So now I have three panels instead of four.
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The second panel is long enough to serve Module B as well as the diorama board and its extension.
Although I am lucky to have my hobby room I do not have a workshop. So I cut the board to size in the kitchen and did this test fit in the living room. Then I painted the panel in the garden room and did the final fitting out in the hobby room.
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The reinforcements are holding the panel flat above Module B.
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The new panel drops into the slot in the extension (same as the first panel) so I only need one thumbwheel to hold it in place. Which is fortunate because this is the only thumbwheel I can reach when the layout is in its place in the hobby room.
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I really like the overall effect here, I think the shape is easier on the eye and it makes the model look more interesting.
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Nevertheless, this is taking me down a route to more woodwork, to enclose the fiddle yard. I really don’t want to tackle this yet.
There is also the matter of the illustration! I was terrible in art lessons at school, and I dropped the subject at 13. The breadth of modelling on WT does rather show how some projects excel in the artistic sides of things. I am far happier with a soldering iron than a paintbrush in my hand, so I think I will best live with the magnolia for a while.