How-To Realistic Stone Piers, Walls and Abutments - Simple Method and Budget Supplies

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  • Опубликовано: 8 янв 2025
  • How-To Realistic Stone Piers, Walls and Abutments - Simple Method and Budget Supplies
    In this video I show just how easy it is to create believable and realistic stone style textures using a quick, easy and inexpensive method.
    There are many methods out there that can produce excellent effects. This is simply, one method of many.
    Please be sure to help our hobby grow by sharing and subscribing to this channel. Stay tuned for more videos.
    INFORMATION:
    TRACKSIDE SCENERY
    Website - www.tracksidescenery.com
    Facebook - tracksidescenery
    RUclips - / tracksidescenery
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    If you or someone you know has a great model railroad to share, by all means please let us know. Not everyone has proficient internet skills as many of us have. Share the hobby!

Комментарии • 128

  • @vitale6633
    @vitale6633 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very Informative and Helpful !!!

  • @Stormbergrail
    @Stormbergrail 2 месяца назад

    This is one of the best how to videos I have watched (and I have watched a lot!!! Thank you.

  • @davidmichaelvara
    @davidmichaelvara Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing! That is just awesome! Love your creativity and your sense of humor!!! Cheers and peace out!

  • @jimzkie5634
    @jimzkie5634 Год назад +4

    This dude deserves more likes, thanks btw.. This helps a lot.

  • @70rrsteve51
    @70rrsteve51 3 года назад +20

    Even in O scale, I’ve never had any luck using a soldering iron. I just stick with a sharp pencil. Instead of a rock casting, I use a ball of crumpled-up aluminum foil for the texture on the stones. I feel adding the texture is a critical part of the process. Nice work, Joey, and thanks for the video!

    • @matthewmayton1845
      @matthewmayton1845 2 года назад +1

      You can also use a stone or rock that you find outside for texture. It really is up to you. There is no wrong way to do it. You just want to be happy with your results in the end.

    • @owenoulton9312
      @owenoulton9312 Год назад +2

      Exactly. In O gauge, or 1/48 scale a 1mm line is 2 inches in real life. That's a grossly out of scale grout line in a stone wall - maybe OK in gaming scenery but not in a diorama of railroad layout. I've been modelling for over 50 years and used to be an architectural model maker but a partner in an aftermarket model company.

    • @cva6238
      @cva6238 Год назад +1

      @@owenoulton9312 So says another rivet counter. Thanx for sharing what a big deal you are.

    • @joebloggs8636
      @joebloggs8636 Год назад

      ​@@cva6238Get a grip " Special person"..

  • @simplesimon2802
    @simplesimon2802 Год назад +1

    very interesting ... inspirational Thanks for sharing these detailing tips and tricks

  • @richardbedard1245
    @richardbedard1245 2 года назад +3

    I have wanted to start a layout, but being basically "cheap" I don't want to pay the hobby shop price. Learning there is a cheap way to do scenery motivates me. I could use that technique to do a retaining wall.

  • @pookiebrown3276
    @pookiebrown3276 2 года назад +1

    Excellent, demo the 3 examples, of shading, were spot on.Thanks, & keep it coming.

  • @juanlopez3624
    @juanlopez3624 Год назад

    Thank you . first time I see u and I like the way you voice over, it is clear and simple. Thanks.

  • @driverman8615
    @driverman8615 Год назад +1

    Was looking for a stone wall for my tunnel and I found it!! thanks.

  • @Eclipse1988
    @Eclipse1988 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very cool!

  • @michaelbaker8721
    @michaelbaker8721 Год назад +2

    Absolutely great presentation. I need a custom wall configuration, and this will be what I do... Thanks for the fantastic tip!

  • @brian102256
    @brian102256 3 года назад +4

    Great how-to Joey, thanks for sharing!! - Brian

  • @richardbedard1245
    @richardbedard1245 2 года назад +1

    I really like your background sounds, they are relaxing.

  • @kevinsteele6799
    @kevinsteele6799 2 года назад +1

    Great Video

  • @uptownphotography
    @uptownphotography Год назад +1

    Nice video...Well done...

  • @dj6961
    @dj6961 2 года назад

    Just what I've been looking for.

  • @cva6238
    @cva6238 Год назад +1

    Nice work. Great satisfaction in building things with skill. Kudos.

  • @600GRANT
    @600GRANT 3 года назад +1

    Very nice technique

  • @davevan8864
    @davevan8864 3 года назад +1

    FANTASTIC to see you Joey!!! A great how to as always! Thanks

  • @ScottRails
    @ScottRails Год назад +1

    Looks awesome, thanks.

  • @eastmidlandparkway6267
    @eastmidlandparkway6267 Год назад +1

    What a great way to make your own tunnel/bridge abutments l am wanting to make a bridge next to a double track tunnel now I have seen your video l am going to have a go l have got some celatex to use up was it a soldering iron you used to create the brick work once again great and a great way to use things that we already have
    Best wishes
    Kev Beighton Parkway

  • @chucksmith155
    @chucksmith155 3 года назад

    Nice job Joey

  • @WHJeffB
    @WHJeffB 4 месяца назад

    While a chop or miter saw is gross overkill for cutting foam, that technique is actually brilliant! I'm going to pull my saw down and start squaring up all the mongrel pieces of foam I have that don't have a square corner or straight edge! Perfect...
    The demo is for O scale... I've done this in HO and use a knife to scribe the lines, which makes for a finer, more appropriate (for HO scale) mortar joint. I just use thin piece of metal to expand the lines cut with a blade, which makes them more visible, but not as wide as a pencil or scribing tool would.
    You've got a great channel here!! One of about a dozen model train channels that I've watched that have far too few subscribers, compared to other not as good channels that have many times more subscribers.

  • @peterainsworth8466
    @peterainsworth8466 3 года назад +1

    Excellent. Great tips thanks.

  • @permijitdunkley5149
    @permijitdunkley5149 3 года назад +2

    Good Housekeeping interior decorating skills for your living environment space of your home cleaning walls#

  • @spuds6423
    @spuds6423 3 года назад

    Cool music 🎶🎶🎶👍

  • @richardsandoval8157
    @richardsandoval8157 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for the info 🎉 that was really helpful 👍👍👍🙏🙏🙏

  • @texastomeh3077
    @texastomeh3077 3 года назад +1

    EXCELLENT VIDEO!!! Well done!!

  • @rangermiller9969
    @rangermiller9969 8 месяцев назад

    Sure looks great!

  • @Mercatoyd
    @Mercatoyd 3 года назад

    the hot iron created what appears to be grout in the final.. I like this idea rather than knife cuts.. excellent video. Thank you for the share.

  • @rjl110919581
    @rjl110919581 3 года назад +1

    thank you for your detail video

  • @lanejohnson7656
    @lanejohnson7656 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for these videos that show an average Joe a way to create cool stuff for their layout and on the cheap. I was thinking how to do a realistic brick road and I think this is the ticket. 👍👍

  • @markharrison3445
    @markharrison3445 2 года назад

    Great video, thank you! This solves my dilemma of creating about 30' of stone wall for my o scale layout without breaking the bank buying already made products which were not exactly what I wanted anyway. I will start this project right away.

  • @ericverpeten8503
    @ericverpeten8503 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nice 👍👍👌👌👌👌👌👌

  • @johnarthur6302
    @johnarthur6302 3 года назад +3

    Joey, those look incredible. I’ve done something similar for a rock cut, but hadn’t thought to carve stacked stones into it. Mind is wandering to all sorts of possibilities now - Thanks for sharing! -John

  • @andrewpalm2103
    @andrewpalm2103 3 года назад

    Sir, you are an artist. When done that foam looked like real stone. Thanks for sharing your techniques.

  • @jonathanboswall4703
    @jonathanboswall4703 3 года назад +1

    They are fantastic , looking forward in creating this in HO

  • @Mukundanghri
    @Mukundanghri 3 года назад +1

    This is a great plus for me. I'm doing a landscape design and spent at least an hour at Michael's looking at the possibilities with their foam blocks; painting and colors are my weakness.

  • @datalasse
    @datalasse 3 года назад +1

    Great how-to!

  • @spencerbass7142
    @spencerbass7142 3 года назад

    They sure do look great.

  • @johnrocheleau1015
    @johnrocheleau1015 3 года назад +1

    Awesome

  • @dennisfly1
    @dennisfly1 3 года назад +1

    Nice Thanks!

  • @philRminiatures
    @philRminiatures 3 года назад

    Looks simple and effective, most realistic and superb close ups...have to make a try!

  • @nashnash3608
    @nashnash3608 3 года назад

    I used the paint thinner and black for the wash, but it ate the foam. Will try the alcohol wash on my next trail. Great video. Going to make a stone engine house.

  • @BroadswordWargaming
    @BroadswordWargaming 3 года назад

    Really like this video. Good work!

  • @DuncSargentsKarstValleyRR
    @DuncSargentsKarstValleyRR 3 года назад +2

    For N Scale I am using Floral Foam. Although it is delicate, it's finer material reduces the furriness of the blocks. Once scored with the block pattern I paint on a couple layers of tinned Plaster of Paris before painting. --dunc

  • @medwaymodelrailway7129
    @medwaymodelrailway7129 3 года назад +1

    Enjoy video thanks very much.

  • @MRR_Shadowolf
    @MRR_Shadowolf 3 года назад

    Very nice, thanks for sharing!

  • @djstrains
    @djstrains 3 года назад

    looks really good

  • @conrailfan6277
    @conrailfan6277 3 года назад +1

    That second one you did looks so
    close to the piers on an old Pennsy
    bridge close to me, but one side of
    the pier is built to a point so it sheds
    ice from the river plus debris from
    flooding, great tips Joey!!

  • @chucklamb3496
    @chucklamb3496 3 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @Ausmerica
    @Ausmerica 3 года назад

    I wish this type of foam wasn't so expensive here in my area.
    Great Idea. Going to have to go and do some hunting at some building sites.

  • @steve87thpsap
    @steve87thpsap 3 года назад

    Nice work there.

  • @Steve-of8zo
    @Steve-of8zo Год назад +1

    They look great. Did you go back after and make some if the grooves deeper and more uneven for the final photos. It appears that to me

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  Год назад

      HI Steve, no, the grooves probably look deeper from the black wash as it would cause that contrast.

  • @HenrikLaurell
    @HenrikLaurell 3 года назад

    Amazing work! Looks really nice.

  • @SB5SimulationsFerroviairesEEP
    @SB5SimulationsFerroviairesEEP 3 года назад

    Cool! Stéph.

  • @markjolyn94
    @markjolyn94 3 года назад

    Great job on those piers!! Thanks for the tips

  • @gregoryamer
    @gregoryamer 3 года назад

    Looks awesome

  • @rickpinter1081
    @rickpinter1081 2 года назад

    Great video, thank you! I am thinking of getting into diorama building, and this was a great instructional video!

  • @trashtrainpunk1542
    @trashtrainpunk1542 3 года назад

    Great tip lke always...greetings from the spring-weather in Ulm....Fog of course!

  • @MoonlightFilly
    @MoonlightFilly 2 года назад

    This is perfect! I want to make a tomb for my figures to explore but didn't know where to start with the stone walls. Thanks so much!

  • @tomlewis6533
    @tomlewis6533 3 года назад +2

    Nice job Joey. Have you ever tried the technique where you score the material with a knife and then wash it quickly with a solvent that melts the scores? Then neutralize and paint. I helped a friend do that on a display G scale layout in FL many years ago. Anyway, I enjoy your videos Thanks.

  • @AbelG8781
    @AbelG8781 3 года назад

    Another O scaler I see! These look great!

    • @TheJpec361
      @TheJpec361 3 года назад

      Hang around a bit...he'll be in Z Scale next month...😆

  • @Barbarossamodels
    @Barbarossamodels 3 года назад

    Those are some great examples Joey of stone walls...😯 Really nice tutorial, loads of techniques & ideas 💡🙂👍 Will use some of that in future...

  • @BennyCFD
    @BennyCFD Год назад +1

    Very informative.....................Why was he painting his arm.

  • @strangersun7721
    @strangersun7721 Год назад

    This looks great. I like the idea of using a soldering iron. I'm going to do that with my next build.
    What is "dry chalk" and how did you apply it? Looks very good on that third wall.

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  Год назад

      Dry chalk I use is just ground up artist chalk and then applied with a brush either dry or diluted in water or alcohol.

  • @madammerry
    @madammerry Год назад

    Is very much awesome 🤩 but how do you put on the wall ?? Do you have any tutorial for that? Can you do that in a real wall please? Thanks 🙏🏼

  • @Eduardomd54
    @Eduardomd54 7 месяцев назад

    I will try right away your technic, to support an atlas HO bridge

  • @kenshores9900
    @kenshores9900 3 года назад

    Extremely neat idea. Tnanks. Just have to remember when it comes time to use them. Crack on!

  • @Gale_Force_Raceway
    @Gale_Force_Raceway Год назад +1

    Ya make it look so easy, I think you have me convinced to try this... I saw a gray foam from U.K. which appears to be a much better quality. IS this green foam like Home Depot/Lowe's in the U.S?? ((Subb'ed and full Bell'ed, looking fwd to more!))

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  Год назад +1

      Yep, box store green stuff. I get them in 4x8 sheets

  • @David-Field.Stuff01
    @David-Field.Stuff01 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic video. Ive been searching for a stone wall painting step by step video for months. I wonder if the modge podge is necessary if ones stonework is made from air dry clay?

  • @TheyMakeItLikeThat
    @TheyMakeItLikeThat 3 года назад +4

    This is well done! Have you ever tried starting black, and dry brushing various colours getting lighter, ending off with white?

  • @oldbaldfatman2766
    @oldbaldfatman2766 3 года назад

    Nov. 7, 2021---Thanks for the video, even though I've seen others doing the same, but without the soldering iron. Now I'll be the first to admit that I'm a lazy sob and it just occurred to me, could you make a 2 part silicone mold of what you just made? Then cast additional copies in plaster of paris? Imagine if you had several silicone abutments, but in different sizes. Possible even make some so the interlock?

  • @jimbos3421
    @jimbos3421 3 года назад +1

    Your a master! How much formal artistic training have you had?

    • @remlya
      @remlya 3 года назад +2

      *you’re

  • @TriGogglin
    @TriGogglin 3 года назад

    Oh man those are great, im gonna have to try that, in N scale gonna be tougher.

    • @allenbarnes7202
      @allenbarnes7202 3 года назад +2

      I make my brick walls this way, in n-scale. But only need a sharp pencil

    • @TriGogglin
      @TriGogglin 3 года назад +1

      @@allenbarnes7202 thanks for the confidence booster, definitely gonna give it a go now, heck won't cost me nothing if I screw it up.

  • @johnclaeys9514
    @johnclaeys9514 3 года назад +1

    a rougher, more randomly weathered texture on the stone can be achieved by misting spray paint on to the surface of the foam after you have shaped and carved it. the more spray paint(other solvents can also be misted on to the surface), the more the paint will eat into the foam and change the texture of the surface. practice is needed to determine the amount of paint or solvent needed to get the desired effect.
    \

    • @wjspade
      @wjspade 8 месяцев назад

      Neat! I usually just use a wire brush and sand paper.

  • @rangermiller9969
    @rangermiller9969 8 месяцев назад +1

    Is the 6 x 6 inch square 1 inch in thickness or 2 inches?

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  8 месяцев назад +1

      2" thick approx. Cut down from a large 4x8' sheet

  • @frankmmiii
    @frankmmiii 3 года назад

    Nice video Joey,
    What can be safely used to waterproof the foam and paint from washing away or running? I was thinking of using this outside when I do my "G" scale layout and also for my "O" scale, which I might set something up to run outdoors in nice weather.
    Thanks,
    Frank M.

  • @heidim6468
    @heidim6468 3 года назад

    Jesso would work also. It’s a great sealer.

  • @debrapollard2044
    @debrapollard2044 2 года назад

    How long do you think this will last outside day in and day out

  • @CM-ARM
    @CM-ARM 3 года назад

    Looks great but can it be damaged easily??

  • @pancake2662
    @pancake2662 3 года назад

    This type of method was developed after the 1980 when the insulating styrofoam became more available. We have the white styrene ball type of Styrofoam that we didn't have this solid core stuff yet. I used the white for the mountains in for detailing I use the more dense insulation board. Go way back we used to use black cardboard insulation cellutech we'd lay the track on table top thet wood dead in the sound make the plywood not sound like a drum.

  • @mgamga9476
    @mgamga9476 3 года назад +2

    It's relaxing because of the fumes your inhaling lol

  • @TheJpec361
    @TheJpec361 3 года назад

    Joey, what blade is that in your chop saw?

  • @waynehawkins2157
    @waynehawkins2157 3 года назад

    One question I have can you lay track on gater board for diarama or a small layout?

  • @1realtruthrightnow742
    @1realtruthrightnow742 11 месяцев назад +1

    Does anyone have a suggestion on what to seal it with if I were to keep something like this outside?

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  11 месяцев назад +1

      You could probably seal it with something like Krylon Matte Clear. That might work.

    • @1realtruthrightnow742
      @1realtruthrightnow742 11 месяцев назад

      @@tracksidescenery thank you!

  • @ericvanzytveld9034
    @ericvanzytveld9034 3 года назад

    I saw a technique where a modeler rolled crumpled-tin-foil over the foam to give the face a more rough-hewn look, then proceeded with painting and washing. Thoughts?

  • @marciamuller5447
    @marciamuller5447 9 месяцев назад +2

    Very good work, but the music was killing me

  • @peterp696
    @peterp696 10 месяцев назад

    You make this look easy, which means it's not easy. LOL

  • @astroboy862
    @astroboy862 3 года назад

    How can I make a curved stone railway bridge with the foam?

  • @saultrigueros480
    @saultrigueros480 3 года назад

    Muy bueno como se llama ese material???

  • @Zogatn
    @Zogatn 3 года назад

    Hi, what XPS are You use, XPS 300, XPS 500 or XPS 700?

  • @dennleo843
    @dennleo843 2 года назад

    why did you start by painting the whole think black and then painting over the black with yur colors?

  • @darrinlindsey
    @darrinlindsey 3 года назад

    What do you mean by "dry chalk" on that 3rd piece?

    • @tracksidescenery
      @tracksidescenery  3 года назад

      Just dry ground chalk, see many of our other videos where we use chalks extensively.

  • @saultrigueros480
    @saultrigueros480 3 года назад

    Qué material es ese???

  • @xavicalls787
    @xavicalls787 3 года назад +1

    👍👍😀😀👍👍

  • @maxbrandt6
    @maxbrandt6 3 года назад +2

    It's so easy even a caveman can do it!

    • @robd1329
      @robd1329 3 года назад +1

      Lol..i remember them commercials

  • @helenanieto5615
    @helenanieto5615 3 года назад

    Subtítulos en español por favor.

  • @MrWorstNews
    @MrWorstNews 7 месяцев назад

    "It's realistic!!!"
    Where's the plaster?