I've seen a few modern layouts with graffiti applied to walls, buildings and best of all the rolling stock.
I think it makes a rake of the same wagons unusual and different.
I fancy giving it a go and would practise on some plasticard first.
Any advice appreciated on where to buy, application, materials needed, etc etc.
Ron
I am not sure how to post a link to a particular thread, but if you search for -
Graffiti artists strike!
reply #6 seems to have some information which will be of use. :thumbsup:
Ron - sorry, the reply #6 is more about weathering, (should have read it properly first :-[).
Does anyone make any N-scale gibbets? I need some if I find any 1:148 rapscallions making a mess on my layout to make an example of them.
:laughabovepost:
I'm in the US, and Microscale and Blair Line decals are available here. Try a google search for 'n gauge grafitti decals' or do similar on eBay. There are lots around. Easy to do, too... I have done some and agree they are very effective on a rake of wagons or a dummy 66.
There are some graffiti apps where you can type in what you want, and select the style and colours you want, too.
I'm going to be the Debbie Downer on this topic, I personally don't really like the graffiti side of the railway scene, I know it is a prominent part of what we see everyday, but many layouts are seen, photographed and shared amongst our younger members of the hobby, I hate to be a part of showing off what is wrong and illegal (it may even encourage some to partake in tagging in real life), I prefer to see a highly detailed and weathered piece of rolling stock or abandoned building, does it mean I also don't like smashed windows in a building, no as those can also be done by weather conditions or demolition.
Each of course to their own, and for the topic on where to get decals I regularly see them pop up on eBay although they are the same ones/print outs each listing.
I feel you have a good point there, to an extent. But I think that a young child at a model railway exhibition is hardly going to remember even being to it when they get to the age when they are capable of vandalising property.
If they do remember, then they're more likely to become law-abiding model railway enthusiasts! :thumbsup:
Unfortunately if you model the modern scene and want realism on your layout, then it's part of the show.
The alternative is, of course, to model railways at the turn of the 20th century
My layout is based on the late fifties - early sixties, and I must admit I have graffiti on various walls and buildings around the layout. Just white paint, though..... not the multicoloured spray stuff we get today!
Well Mr Bealman, it may be an accurate depiction of the modern scene in Britain but in (my) corporate blue days it was a rare thing to see thank goodness. Does this come into the ambit of rule 1 ? Not only can the rolling stock be what we want, so can the cleanliness and orderliness of the scenery.
My OO layout is set in the 1960's and the Graffiti of that era (and through to the late 1970's) was generally white paint and Football related, from my memory of the time.
There were the odd "political" ones, and this is one I have to recreate at some time on my layout...
(http://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/gallery/62/5878-150318060100.jpeg)
There was a similar one on Spring Road Viaduct in Ipswich as well. Not far from this example is a "Stop US War in Vietnam" one that can still be made out 50 years or so later, despite it being rapidly painted over at the time!
Cool! I assume that refers to Radio Caroline?
Bob: I thought that was what I was saying? ;)
Quote from: Bealman on March 15, 2018, 06:16:35 AM
Cool! I assume that refers to Radio Caroline?
Yes, that was painted in the mid 1960's and was still visible until the late 1980's (you could see it from Ipswich Station), when it got covered over by "modern" style graffiti.
It's amusing that I am typing this, 50 years+ on from when that was painted, with Radio Caroline playing on the radio here, as they are now licenced to broadcast on 648khz to East Anglia!!
To answer the OP check out Scalescene.com
They have a download graffiti sheet that you print onto transfer paper. The download comes with a set of instructions.
HTH
:beers:
Mick
Other suppliers will be available online
DMToys in Germany show this range of N gauge graffiti from TL-Modellbau:
https://www.en.dm-toys.de/liste/items/L265588/search/Graffiti.html (https://www.en.dm-toys.de/liste/items/L265588/search/Graffiti.html)
I'm modelling Swiss railways, and if I wanted to be accurate I would need all of these, but in my model world nobody would spray graffiti cos the Creator would have them melted down and recycled as ballast.
Edit: manufacturers website has all sorts of nice decals:
https://tl-modellbau.de/TL-Decals-1-160-N (https://tl-modellbau.de/TL-Decals-1-160-N)
Another Edit: DMToys look to be stocking most if not all the TL range of decals, and prices seems to be cheaper per item:
https://www.en.dm-toys.de/liste/hersteller/TL-Decals.html (https://www.en.dm-toys.de/liste/hersteller/TL-Decals.html)
:laughabovepost: :laughabovepost:
Don't have access to my railway laptop at the mo but I'm sure some of the Scalescenes kits I downloaded had graffiti in them so that you could add it to your construction if that was your bag.
My layouts have always been set in a world where vandals were dealt with before badgers ;)
It's possums here, mate. :thumbsup:
Possums can operate spray cans ? Where do they carry the money to buy them ?
Quote from: BobB on March 15, 2018, 09:05:41 AM
Possums can operate spray cans ? Where do they carry the money to buy them ?
(http://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/gallery/62/255-150318043454.jpeg)
:laughabovepost: :smiley-laughing: :laughabovepost:
Only place on the railway I've seen it was an old steam era oil tanker rusting away in the sidings got taken away when they tore up the sidings a few years ago.
Some of the commercial decal sets are very nice, but to be honest all you need is your finest painbrush and a couple of colours (or plain white if back in the 60s/70s). Let's face it, the vast majority of graffiti isn't a Banksy, it's just roughly sprayed or painted. If you do it yourself you don't have to worry about disguising decal carrier film either.
I see someone was active in Königshafen a few years ago!
(http://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/gallery/63/5885-160318224827.jpeg) (http://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/index.php?action=gallery;sa=view&id=63022)