Corner
Plain styrene walls cut to size
Plastic sheets representing wooden boards glued onto the plain wall. Gains you frame widht and nicely thickens the wall
Brick pattern made using putty
Brick pattern on street scraped in the plaster filled base
All main wall details and the entrance step added
Painted street and parts for lamp post (genuine for that city/street)
Roof ready to be fitted
Lamp post assembled and primed
Propably the smallest dog
Added details like glass, blinds, doors etc.
All assembled. Figures were also scratchbuilt for this particular vignette
Happy modelling!
The real house
The original lamp post
Kommentare
13 2 November 2019, 02:58
Edgars Bizūns
First of all hey guys, long time no see.. this is my welcome back album 🙂 and i would love if someone could tell me how to rotate all the pictures 😄
First of all hey guys, long time no see.. this is my welcome back album 🙂 and i would love if someone could tell me how to rotate all the pictures 😄
2 November 2019, 03:15
Danny Meer
Hi Edgar, when you open a picture in Windows Photo viewer you can use "CTRL+R" to rotate pictures. When the photo is rotated the way you want, you can close the viewer and it will be saved the way it's rotated 🙂
Hi Edgar, when you open a picture in Windows Photo viewer you can use "CTRL+R" to rotate pictures. When the photo is rotated the way you want, you can close the viewer and it will be saved the way it's rotated 🙂
2 November 2019, 05:45
Treehugger
JPEG images can be rotated from the "manage" section in your project apparently. PNG images can't be rotated it seems. Btw, if you have Windows OS, you can simply rotate your images by right clicking them, and rotating them clockwise or anti clockwise.
Tip: Windows have a snipping tool for creating images. Sometimes it is easier to just use the snipping tool from an image previewed anywhere on your computer monitor, and then have that saved directly as a jpeg or png image. Only bad thing is that compression rate is fixed, and the marking tools that works with the snipping tool, is limited. So a 2d editor would be preferred.
Also, nice scratch building! 🙂
JPEG images can be rotated from the "manage" section in your project apparently. PNG images can't be rotated it seems. Btw, if you have Windows OS, you can simply rotate your images by right clicking them, and rotating them clockwise or anti clockwise.
Tip: Windows have a snipping tool for creating images. Sometimes it is easier to just use the snipping tool from an image previewed anywhere on your computer monitor, and then have that saved directly as a jpeg or png image. Only bad thing is that compression rate is fixed, and the marking tools that works with the snipping tool, is limited. So a 2d editor would be preferred.
Also, nice scratch building! 🙂
2 November 2019, 06:47
Edgars Bizūns
Havent had any computer for more than 3 years now, always been uploading thru my phone. Since they're the right way up in photo manager, thought they will be the same here. But sure thing guys thanks for the help 🙂 will try something.
And thank you both for compliments 🙂
Havent had any computer for more than 3 years now, always been uploading thru my phone. Since they're the right way up in photo manager, thought they will be the same here. But sure thing guys thanks for the help 🙂 will try something.
And thank you both for compliments 🙂
2 November 2019, 14:41
Spanjaard
Beautiful job
If you want to rotate the pictures in SCM you only need to go to manage album, select advance options and choose the correct orientation. I believe this option did not exist back in 2019 🙂
Beautiful job
If you want to rotate the pictures in SCM you only need to go to manage album, select advance options and choose the correct orientation. I believe this option did not exist back in 2019 🙂
21 July 2023, 06:07
Album info
Built for a commission, this little street corner vignette is a close representation of a real house in Jurmala city, Latvia. Scratchbuilt in a ring box, scale approx. 1/90.