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I've used these as well Otto, real easy and they look great. Don' have any pics to show but I used them to make some bricks for a foundation of a station I did. You would never know that it was printed from three feet away.
Ah, he is invoking the old three foot rule! Some modelers use, others don't. How will it look in eye-level photos (like for a magazine article)?
If only there was some kind of scanning device and printing unit that could replicate these...Also for the decals, just print black on white decal paper using the above mentioned miracle device.
Ah, Peteski, I don't subscribe to the three foot rule either, but the reality is that when building a large home layout such as mine, one has to be very smart about how to use time and energy. I have some "in your face" foreground scenes that require a LOT of modeling time, and some background models that frankly don't rate the same level of attention. Some even have have plain back walls As it happens the Maxwell Coffee building sits just about exactly 3' from the viewer's eyeballs. Having said that, the printed Paper Creek brick is good enough for close up models (and I still have some), see below. I'm not familiar with the other product (thanks for the link!) but it looks promising also.I think the key to making this building feel right is getting the signage right.Otto
Oh, I understand your priorities (quantity vs. level-of-detail). That is why you need to befriend people who enjoy spending weeks building and super-detailing a kit for you layout. My friends have good-size, but not super-detailed layouts, where in few places you can find little gems like this....I doubt I'll even have a layout myself, but my hand-prints are all over other people's layout. I like this arrangement - I build kits and they do all the grunt-work like building bench-work or layout maintenance.
Peteski, my dear friend, lol, did you just volunteer to build me some superdetailed kits? Thank you!! All in good fun, I do love your work.Problem is I don't need kits, no matter how nicely detailed they are (and the ones you posted are truly very nice) they are what everybody else has, small town Geneamerica. No disrespect meant, but trying to recreate specific urban locations and buildings at a specific time takes a lot more effort then buying and assembling kits, as others going this route will attest. So when I stumble on something in kit form that can be modified into a reasonable facsimile of an actual building, like the case here with Roberts Printing/Maxwell Coffee, I'm all over it. It can be superdetailed or not, depending on its location on the layout, but as long as it conveys the feel of the actual structure, I'm good. So it's not actually "quantity over the level of detail", it's what looks and feels right vs. a super detailed building that's wrong. Makes any sense?Fun stuff...Otto