freerobert Posted August 21 Posted August 21 Just watched a YouTube vid, a fellow used wood grain tape and Bare metal chrome. I found a good deal at Walmart, in several colors of wood grain. Will be using on my soon to come 1950 Chevy P.U.
freerobert Posted August 21 Author Posted August 21 Ofr course in the bed of said P.U., just in case you did'nt finger it out.
stavanzer Posted August 22 Posted August 22 Dang! I was hoping to see photos of the woodgrain on the cab and doors! 1
NOBLNG Posted August 22 Posted August 22 (edited) I am using real walnut wood edging veneer for a truck bed. Edited Wednesday at 12:40 PM by NOBLNG 9
Ace-Garageguy Posted August 22 Posted August 22 (edited) Just my personal opinion: I think very fine close-grained wood like basswood makes for a more scale-correct appearance than balsa or some veneers. For a free source, coffee stir sticks are often made from close-grained wood that looks great for pickup-bed planks, but they have some thickness that may be a deal-breaker for some modelers. I think it was Sig that used to make beautiful 1/32" close-grained plywood, but I haven't seen it in a long time. CORRECTION: Apparently it's still available https://sigmfg.com/products/sigpw001-plywood-1-32-x-6-x-12-3-ply 1/64" too: https://sigmfg.com/products/sigpw035-plywood-wingskins-1-64x12x12 Edited August 22 by Ace-Garageguy punctiliousness 3
Deathgoblin Posted August 23 Posted August 23 Done this on my 55 Chevy stepside. Used Washi woodgrain tape and BMF. Came out awesome! 4
Straightliner59 Posted August 23 Posted August 23 18 hours ago, Ace-Garageguy said: I think it was Sig that used to make beautiful 1/32" close-grained plywood, but I haven't seen it in a long time. Yes. Midwest makes it, too. 1
stitchdup Posted August 23 Posted August 23 starbucks stirrers work great. it only takes a soggy teabag to stain them darker and a soak in white vinegar to age them. this is just duplicolour clear over mud stained stirrers 4 1
johnyrotten Posted August 24 Posted August 24 I used coffee stirrers for this bed floor. The fact that some of them are warped and irregular worked out perfectly since this truck is well worn. Light acrylic washes for the staining. 6
Bugatti Fan Posted Wednesday at 07:04 AM Posted Wednesday at 07:04 AM A very fine grained veneer made from Pear Wood is one I have used when I built a model of the wood planked Hispano Suiza H6C. I think there may be one of two pictures of my model in the thread ' Lets see some scratch built things'. It will give an idea what the pear wood veneer looks like coated with a little button polish. Button polish is a form of Shellac with a slightly golden tint to it, normally used for French Polishing furniture.
Big John Posted Wednesday at 05:50 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:50 PM Ah, for the days when cigars were wrapped in thin veneers 3
maxwell48098 Posted Thursday at 02:24 PM Posted Thursday at 02:24 PM 20 hours ago, Big John said: Ah, for the days when cigars were wrapped in thin veneers My uncle Henry was a cigar smoker and I had him save the wrappers for me. I used them for bed floors, and even the side panels on the original MPC woody kit. A.J. 1
my66s55 Posted Thursday at 04:27 PM Posted Thursday at 04:27 PM I did this very simply. Go on the internet and find wood samples of what you want.Scale them down to what you need. Print them out, glue them in and trim off the excess.
Volzfan59 Posted yesterday at 02:47 PM Posted yesterday at 02:47 PM What department is the wood grain tape in at Walmart? Hardware, crafts?
Big John Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago (edited) Edge banding wood veneers usually have a hot melt backing so they can be ironed on to the side of shelves etc. Wood working section, probably hardware. Edited 21 hours ago by Big John
Bugatti Fan Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago Edge banding wood veneers from the various ones I have seen all have one problem. Wood grain that is way oversized for scale appearance. In 1/25th/1/24th scale The wood grain needs to be ultra fine to this type of application. Extremely close grained woods like Pear and Holly for example in veneers would be more to scale in appearance.
Can-Con Posted 36 minutes ago Posted 36 minutes ago On 9/4/2025 at 1:27 PM, my66s55 said: I did this very simply. Go on the internet and find wood samples of what you want.Scale them down to what you need. Print them out, glue them in and trim off the excess. Check this site out. Multiple pics of pretty well every type of wood in every variation available. Pics are of the actual boards and sheets they sell, not just random examples. I've been planning to use the pics to print out on decal sheet but my sheets are too old, need new ones before I can do this. https://certainlywood.com/index.php A couple example pics, and they have hundreds, if not thousands. oak, maple They even have exotic woods,, goncalo paduk monkey
Can-Con Posted 33 minutes ago Posted 33 minutes ago (edited) 20 hours ago, Big John said: Edge banding wood veneers usually have a hot melt backing so they can be ironed on to the side of shelves etc. Wood working section, probably hardware. I have a couple rolls of that. The glue is almost as thick as the wood itself making it almost useless as is. SO, how do I get the glue off so I can use it, any ideas to get it off simply and cleanly? Edited 32 minutes ago by Can-Con
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