oldcarfan Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 (edited) In an effort to improve my photo taking, I started a backdrop style diorama. It's a generic shop/factory floor but inspired by Magnus Walker's garage in Los Angeles. I used some printed brick bought off eBay along with a couple sheets of black foam board and some balsa left over from an old project. So far I'm only in to the project for the price of the brick sheets and the foam board. The gray strips are just painted balsa to represent concrete. I found some old photos online of a shop built like that. The base is 12 x 21 and I've backed the foam with more balsa strips on the underside. I'm hoping that will curb the foam board's tendency to warp. In scale, the brick walls would be around 16 feet if I measured right. The upper part is just plain black. I need to add some doors and windows and a decent floor, but it's a start. If anyone has tips, let me know. Edited March 7, 2024 by oldcarfan 3
MeatMan Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 12 hours ago, oldcarfan said: In an effort to improve my photo taking, I started a backdrop style diorama. It's a generic shop/factory floor but inspired by Magnus Walker's garage in Los Angeles. I used some printed brick bought off eBay along with a couple sheets of black foam board and some balsa left over from an old project. So far I'm only in to the project for the price of the brick sheets and the foam board. The gray strips are just painted balsa to represent concrete. I found some old photos online of a shop built like that. The base is 12 x 21 and I've backed the foam with more balsa strips on the underside. I'm hoping that will curb the foam board's tendency to warp. In scale, the brick walls would be around 16 feet if I measured right. The upper part is just plain black. I need to add some doors and windows and a decent floor, but it's a start. If anyone has tips, let me know. Great idea and nice start! I've done a couple of simple ones but would really like to do something similar.
oldcarfan Posted Tuesday at 09:08 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 09:08 PM I can't find my in-progress pics, but here are a few of it in use. I built a dumpster, a couple of roll up doors, some tool boxes, a workbench, and some signs to go with it. My best idea so far was to embed those rare earth magnets in the walls every couple of inches and put little pieces of steel on the back of the toolboxes and the roll up doors. That way they stick to the walls and I can change up the looks pretty easy. 1
oldcarfan Posted Friday at 01:55 AM Author Posted Friday at 01:55 AM I've added some behind the scenes balsa bracing to the walls as the foam board has started warping a little. Nothing major, I'm guessing it's because of the temperature swings we've had. Last week it was in the low 90s with rain and this week it's been humid and mid-70s. Next week we're looking at close to 100. The wood bracing should stabilize it. I wanted to show something I tried that I think I'm going to like. I was trolling Hobby Lobby looking for ideas and came across the rare earth magnets. The ones I got are thin disks, about 3/8 inch in diameter. The idea is that things on the walls can be removed. The first picture isn't real clear, but I cut a slot in the back of the diorama leaving only the brick facing in place and spaced the magnets about an inch apart. If I want to put on the wall I just glue a thin piece of steel on the back and the magnet holds it firmly in place. For details, I built two roll up doors and various toolboxes so I can switch things up. The big wall size box is a model of my dream toolbox. the two smaller toolboxes came out of a parts box Monogram NASCAR kit and the green box is scratch built. I've started playing with Word and decal paper to make signs and the AREA 51 is one of my failures. I salvaged it by weathering it. lol The Red Ball Garage one was cut out on my wife's Cricut. It came out okay, but the machine doesn't do lettering smaller than about a 1/4 inch very well. Anyway that's where I stand on this backdrop. I just bought a string of battery powered 'fairy lights' and am thinking of ways to use them for lighting. If I had it to do over again I'd use a thin steel sign for the wall between the brick paper and the foam board. It would be a little heavier, but the magnets could then be on the doors and accessories which would probably work better. 1
Mattilacken Posted Friday at 05:58 AM Posted Friday at 05:58 AM Looks good! Like your garage door wen you took the effort to make it in profiles and not just a photo as I have
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