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Little things - for the layout outside the railway fence


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  • RMweb Gold
8 hours ago, steve1 said:

Something to dress up a Metcalfe church. The gargoyle would probably need to be carved. Milliput maybe?

 

steve

 

 

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Mother!!!

 

This is turning into a brilliant little thread!

Edited by The Johnster
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56 minutes ago, Ray Von said:

I love this picture! Imagine the remarks if you modelled it though... 

 

That's what I thought when. i saw it and that's why I intend to do it!

 

steve :D

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I remember there being a gap of about 9" between a former cycle shop and a row of houses in our village that had a couple of boards to keep dogs out. When I was about twelve, I made a metal rod with a hook on the end to fish out an old John Bull Cycle Tyres tyres sign that had been removed from the shop wall years earlier and chucked down the gap. I was an odd child!

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This piece of wall has been many things over the last couple of hundred years.

 

IMG_20210318_121251.jpg.ea403bcec7d95c39d0f544f7140c6ad0.jpg

 

"Cars for hire", a relic from pre WWII, the building was a builders / decorators for years.

 

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The same building, angled to fit the site, has dozens of little details.

 

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The access door has been left open and a modern roller shutter.fitted in place.

 

Having seen the textures on the church notice board posted by @steve1 I had to get a photograph of the door.

 

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Not many drains of this style anymore, they've caused a fair number of accidents to people on skinny wheeled racers and at least one fatality that I know of. My bicycle is immune... The double stone kerb incorporating the gutter is interesting.

 

IMG_20210318_122244.jpg.2f1212ad90a635423e50a3fa3516dc17.jpg

 

 

 

Staircase beside a LNWR bridge to the road above. At some point in the 1920s/30s there was a concrete post at the bottom and the middle landing with a galvanized handrail down the middle of the staircase. 

 

IMG_20210318_122325.jpg.e83b24b6b464e4f4829411d1c193b845.jpg

 

Patterned concrete pavement. Often seen outside shops and petrol stations.

 

Edited by MrWolf
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...... and the cast iron stop valve cover ..... not modelled very often either. Going back to the 'detached' terraced houses, did anyone note that the kerb line had been dropped to allow the rainwater from the drab green coloured house to drain into the highway drain? No reason now to worry if your model footway isn't laid 'flat'!

 

Stone kerbs and gutters used to be very common in Cardiff together with sandstone flags.

 

Just for info: Modern carriageway construction avoids constructing concrete 'gutters', known as channelling, as the surfacing, which is the 'pavement' is now taken to the kerb edge. Channelling is restricted to where the highway is very flat and the channelling used to make gradients to take the water to the gullies, the 'drain'.

 

In highway parlance, the highway is divided into the carriageway and the footway and any hard surfacing is the 'pavement', which can cover both the carriageway and the footway. A footway that does not follow a carriageway is usually a footpath that may or may not be hard-surfaced.

 

Cheers,

 

Philip

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On 19/03/2021 at 17:26, Ray Von said:

From the port of Ramsgate:

 

Assorted ironmongery-

IMG_20210319_121640855_HDR.jpg.08b6303c2c301fc6145902f87d3e2919.jpg

 

Nice crane-

IMG_20210319_121549128_HDR.jpg.9762faef48957fc3efa7d0b9abfb6eee.jpg

 

Interesting colour and pattern here-

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Not entirely sure what the object on the right is?

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The two items in the bottom picture are nice relics. The left hand item is a policeman's shelter or a spotter's shelter dating from WWII. They were placed at road junctions and even on factory rooves to enable a copper, nightwatchman or aircraft spotter a little bit of shelter during air raids.

 

The other item is the upright from an Avery weighbridge balance.. originally it had a graduated  brass strip on an arm attached to the two large bolts on the left. It's what is behind the window of all those old weighbridge huts in goods yards.

 

This is the Pooley type I used for my layout thread 

 

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Edited by MrWolf
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A contrast in materials in a wall in St Helier, Jersey, including a crack due to the ground moving downhill:

Jersey019.JPG.f6a0a849c4436f182d042acba65adaad.JPG

 

A stone wall abutting a rock face a bit further up the same road:

Jersey030.JPG.9d74fccdec677984f5519fb8a74058c3.JPG

 

 

 

Edited by eastglosmog
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Only just found this thread - wonderful!

I started taking pics of the decorative type of village signs some time ago. Having amassed a large collection I started including other objects that I discovered at the same time. Without swamping the thread, I'll see if I can throw some in the mix sometime. Watch this space?

 

Stewart

Edited by stewartingram
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This building is quite large and although in a poor state of repair, as these doors show, is occupied. It's also just a few yards along from the 2 "terraced" houses I posted earlier in the thread.

 

These doors I find interesting in themselves, certainly for weathering purposes.

 

steve

 

PS The paving stones are also worth a look.

 

 

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IMG_0158.JPG

Edited by steve1
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51 minutes ago, steve1 said:

Weathering potential for park benches.

 

steve

 

 

B9B9C4C2-2EB9-468B-9DE5-172010760839.jpeg

 

Plenty of laser cut wooden ones available. All you need to do is paint the wood so it looks like wood. Well spotted!

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  • RMweb Gold
On 17/03/2021 at 09:44, steve1 said:

This is part of a large, old, house in my village. No idea of the purpose, I could guess at deliveries to the kitchen maybe?

 

steve

 

 

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 If you've ever delivered something from the deck of a cart or lorry, you'll know why the door is that height......

 

Sometimes you will see bump stops or kerbs, which are specifically there to stop you reversing through the wall.....

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Interesting weathering effects on a brick wall of Throop Flour Mill, Dorset (including a crack in the brickwork):

ThroopMill10.JPG.05cdad8c65ba09ee7d90ae1c981c6c5b.JPG

 

The main building is built with English Bond brickwork  (alternating layers of brick laid parallel and at right angles to the wall face), except for the window infill.  The extension nearer to the camera is built with stretcher bond (all bricks parallel to the wall face).  Also the corner of the extension is protected against wear by use of rounded end engineering brick up to head height .  The older building has acquired a concrete post to protect the corner.

 

Edited by eastglosmog
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A few from the modern street scene

 

A bus stop marked out in yellow with the double width line at the kerb and the restriction sign to go with it

 

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Next up double yellows with loading restriction kerb markers and sign to go with them

 

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Note also the telephone equipment cases

 

Andy

Edited by SM42
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