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Cats, dustbin liners, 1959 and all that.....


Chris Nevard

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7181235435_bf3f5fd995.jpg

nevard_120612_catcott_DSC_5788, a photo by nevardmedia on Flickr.

Templecombe's 43216 is captured pottering about the sidings at Catcott Burtle on a bright but blustery day in magnificent summer of 1959. Click on the photo to get a bigger view.

 

'59 was very similar to the summer of 2006, with hot temperatures and wall to wall sunshine running well into the autumn. This is probably one of the reasons why there are so many colour photographs from that year, colour films from that era being generally very slow and totally unsuitable for photography of moving trains unless the sun was out. Cameras in the 1950's compared to today where very expensive, especially if you wanted something with a lens faster than f2.8 which would have been needed to get a high enough shutter speed to stop a fast moving train on the mainline, even with the sun out much of the time.

 

Catcott has been wrapped up since last autumn in a cat proof cocoon of black dustbin liners, mostly to stop Saffy our British Short Har from chewing the tops off signal posts. This she has done this twice, I'm not really sure of the attraction of etched brass and white metal, it's not as if she's teething and the vet gave her a clean bill of health just the other day at great expense. Why is it that cats always go for the bit that cost the most in time and skills?

 

Cats aside, keeping the layout wrapped up has also kept it nice and fresh, dust being one of the main things that make a layout look tired, that and direct sunlight. Some think that dust makes a layout more realistic, the problem is that good lighting and a camera show it for what it is, 12 inch to the foot fluff and dead skin, mostly the latter I hasten to add! Tip: 'economy' black dustbin liners, split down either side make great lightweight layout covers that won't damage what's underneath.

 

Since doing up the Bachmann Midland 3F I haven't had a chance to show it off on my rose-tinted portrayal of 'The Branch' (the home of the real engine for many years), so this was one of the reasons to get the layout out, as well as trying out a new 35mm f2 Nikkor which focuses extraordinarily close for such a lens, the result being the above. It will make a good partner to my 55mm Micro-Nikkor.

 

This is an extract from my regular blog at www.nevardmedia.blogspot.com

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Good to see Catcott Burtle here again. Can't have too much S&D I feel. Thanks

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  • RMweb Gold

Really like the long grass and wild flowers up against the weathered sleepers. Well observed and beautifully executed! One of my favorite 4mm layouts.

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Thanks :)

 

This is what the eye sees, hence the clouds having a slightly odd angle, because they really are on the backscene (homegrown photographic one) and we're viewing it from an angle here. The only cheat, apart from a puff of smoke is that the layout room could just be seen above the faintish cloud top right where the backscen ran out (it's a foot high), so a little 'blue' was painted in over.

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  • RMweb Gold

Nice shot. I am surprised you haven't come up with scale sized dust Chris.

When we had a Cat it did enjoy batting N gauge trains, however the parrot was more trouble!

Don

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