Groundcover ‘ Part One

Having stared at the ‘Styrofoam-Central’ for several weeks, I was eager to begin adding some scenery, or at the very least hide the pink and beige contours of the layout’s hills! I started by applying a coat of deep brown craft paint to the hillsides. I’ve read many times that modellers prefer to use a light tan colour as their base coat, but as I was modeling early winter, it seemed only logical to use a mud colour. I waited for the paint to dry thoroughly, and then brushed on a coat of full strength white glue. While the glue was still wet, I applied a coat of Woodland Scenics static grass. Despite what I’ve read, I could not make he grass stand up like real grass no matter what I did! Apparently if you shake and squeeze the bottle of static grass when you apply it, it should in theory stand up strait in the glue, but in my case, it fell flat. I applied enough grass to cover the glue, but not so much that it was opaque. I wanted the dark brown paint colour to show through the grass in areas ‘ to help with the illusion that the normally green grass had matted down into the mud with the change in seasons. I waited for the glue to dry thoroughly before vacuuming up the excess with a shop vac.

gc1.jpg

gc2.jpg

gc3.jpg

gc4.jpg

gc5.jpg

gc6.jpg

gc7.jpg

gc8.jpg

gc9.jpg

0 thoughts on “Groundcover ‘ Part One

  • Unfortunatly, static grass won’t stand up unless you use a static grass applicator which, like a VandeGraff generator, creates a static charge causing the “grass” to stand.

  • For my grass all I do is glue on sand, but first do all the stuff you do, but i glue sand on and spray paint it the the color/s I need.

    But may I ask…. What are you doing in picture 7 (going down). It looks like you are trying to make it look wet. It that right?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes:

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>