Friday, October 30, 2020

Civilians and Colored Troops!

After some kind suggestions from the Civil War Railroads group, I ordered some 10 mm civilian figures from Thoroughbred Models. It's been a few weeks since then, and they're finally painted. I chose a mix of the poses and characters. While I was at it, I also painted some additional soldiers. There are some of the Good Ground Minis figures, for comparison. You can see the GHQ (soldiers, general officer, and Lincoln) and Thoroughbred (civilians() figures are very close, but the Good Ground (general officer and staff officer) figures to the far right are much larger and chunkier. 

Sampling of the newest figures, including civilians!

I realized my collection of figures wasn't historically accurate for scenes behind the front lines. What was missing? Black soldiers. They were used heavily for duties like supply and labor. I took some of the artillery crews, which looked like they were lifting something heavy, and made a few new soldiers. 

The soldier climbing the boxcar comes from the siege artillery crew set. It's one of my favorite little vignettes. The soldier sitting on the water tank is from a limbered field artillery set. He was originally riding a caisson. 


The civilians aren't exactly Civil War era, more like the 1880s. Particularly the women's skirts don't have the large hoops under them. But I'm not going to get that picky. You barely notice, anyway, because they're so small and the scenes are busy enough to distract from any historical inaccuracy of the fashion. 


Seeing all these figures at the station platform, however, leads me to think the building is too big for the 10mm figures from GHQ and Thoroughbred. I don't have the math done in my head, but the doors look at least a few "inches" too high. But I'm not going to change it out now. 

This is the kind of small accomplishment that offers big satisfaction. I'm planning on making a new video tour of the layout soon (I know, I know, I've been saying that for months) and having civilians in the station area will really add depth to the scene.

Friday, October 9, 2020

Not quite a tintype, but pretty close

U.S. Supply Depot, 1863

 I'm sure there are ways to get a modern digital photo to look like a tintype. Some day I'll get around to figuring it out. I took some photos the other day of just generic scenes. Two shots stood out when I added a basic iPhone filter to them. It came very close to the look of a Civil War era tintype. Seeing how they look, I'm going to experiment more with this. Modern digital color photos are great for sharing my layout with the model railroad world, but the Civil War historian in me is in love with recreating the tintype look.

Another view, with a short train stopped for water.

It's been tough to carve out time for the layout. I recently received some civilian figures from Thoroughbred Models that look close enough in size to match the GHQ figures. I'll make a post on those separately, including some other scenery and figures updates.