Junction Farm (BESTTrains kits)

Started by deemery, January 25, 2026, 06:17:35 PM

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jbvb

Wish I'd done a better job of documenting how I split the Colonial Georgian House into two.  Here's the previously unphotographed back side of the "big house":

IMGP5899_v1.JPG

IIRC I cut the RH (facing front door) wall down and used it for the hidden end, putting the LH wall in its place. I guess I also made a new rear wall from Northeastern clapboard and put a door in it too.  In your case, a back door in the 1-story "little house" part would face your barn and make pretty much a mirror image of my full size house.
James

deemery

Quote from: jbvb on February 08, 2026, 09:00:05 PMWish I'd done a better job of documenting how I split the Colonial Georgian House into two.  Here's the previously unphotographed back side of the "big house":

IMGP5899_v1.JPG

IIRC I cut the RH (facing front door) wall down and used it for the hidden end, putting the LH wall in its place. I guess I also made a new rear wall from Northeastern clapboard and put a door in it too.  In your case, a back door in the 1-story "little house" part would face your barn and make pretty much a mirror image of my full size house.

I freely admit to being inspired by your house!

dave
Modeling the Northeast in the 1890s - because the little voices told me to

deemery

#77
I found a Tichy masonry door casting that's wide enough to fill the window space.  So I cut out below one window, then trimmed the transom off the casting frame and added the trim:
IMG_1418.jpeg

And a test fit.  That's .020 x .060 for the frame, and .015 x .030 for the door sill.
IMG_1416.jpeg

I'll prime these white.  I haven't decided if I'll paint the new door itself red to match the other doors, or leave it white.

I did lightly repaint the main doors a lighter shade of red, pictures once the paint is dry.

dave
Modeling the Northeast in the 1890s - because the little voices told me to

jbvb

James

deemery

Well, less done today than I hoped.  The taskboard/laserboard door pieces had one segment that warped with the moisture in the paint.  When I tried to straighten that out, it broke.  So I dug into my Evergreen stash, pulled out .020 x .030, cut and CA'd a replacement.  Then I repainted the piece to blend everything together.  That went well.  I also tried painting the styrene door casting after I primed it white.  That did not go so well, so I think that door will remain white.  (And I had to take one dog to the vet, she had a couple accidents and I wanted them to check for an infection.)

So I should be able to complete the kit doors tomorrow.  I also should have dug out the kit windows and painted them when I had the airbrush out, but I'll do that tomorrow, too.

dave
Modeling the Northeast in the 1890s - because the little voices told me to

Michael Hohn

#80
Dave, your plan to add a door makes a lot of sense. Good job.

Mike

KentuckySouthern

Karl

friscomike

Howdy Dave,

The shingle job is outstanding. Aligning that many small shingles is a real challenge, and you met it masterfully.  

Have fun,
mike
My current builds are a Post Office. and miscellaneous rolling stock

Mark Dalrymple

Looking good, Dave.

Shingles have come out well.

Cheers, Mark.

Rick

Dave, roof turned out well and it's shaping up to be a good looking scene.

ACL1504

Dave,

I agree with all the others, shingles and roof turned out fantastic looking.

Tom
"If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
Thomas Jefferson

Tom Langford
telsr1@aol.com

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