VIA's The Canadian, coming through homemade trees. |
Before
taking down a third of my layout (as part of the rebuilding process), I counted
over 500 trees on my model railroad—the majority handmade.
Most
of the trees are made from local plants and weeds such as Yarrow, Spirea and
Sedum, with a few unidentified species thrown in for variety.
Some
of the “trees” are harvested from neighbour’s yards or nearby fields, but I
grow my own Sedum. I have just one small bush, but it yields a couple dozen
trees each year.
Start with this. |
Making
trees from Sedum is easy. All you need is some white glue, clothespins, a piece
of Styrofoam and some cheap spackling paste (or other kind of putty). Spray
paint (brown, black and green), cheap hairspray and Woodland’s Scenics ground
foam finishes it up.
Glue them together, fill in the trunks. |
After
harvesting the Sedum trees, the next step is to select three to five pieces
that fit together to look like, well, a tree. Put the clothespin on the trunk
to hold it together, then squirt white glue inside and alongside the pieces to
let it dry. Stick the trees into the Styrofoam and let them dry overnight.
Spray paint black, brown and green. |
Next,
apply the spackling paste or putty to the base of the trunks to fill in the
cracks and gaps, and let dry.
After
that, it’s time for spray painting. I start by painting the “leaves” (the top
of the tree) green. When dry, I spray paint the truck and underside a mix of
black and brown.
Sprinkle on ground foam. |
When
dry, I spray on the cheap hairspray (use unscented; you won’t regret it), then
sprinkle on ground foam. I use a blended turf as a base, sprinkling on weeds,
burnt grass and yellow to add variation. Remember to apply the ground foam to
the top and the bottom of the tree.
(The
same process goes for the Yarrow and Spirea trees, except you don’t need to
glue them together.)
That’s
it—except for planting the trees on the layout, of course. Which I plan to
start doing again soon, once the new lower level peninsula is finished.
Done! |
Excellent technique! Thanks for posting this story. I'm going to grow some Sedum in my backyard here in Ottawa this year and give it a try. Well, my wife is the gardener :-) and she's willing to give it a try too. Do you know which variety of Sedum you grew?
ReplyDeleteI grew and used Autumn Joy Sedum.
DeleteA colourful perennial, always producing a new crop. Nice to 'sedum' getting recycled!
ReplyDeleteEric