The flash of inspiration came when I remembered that sets of self-adhesive letters often come with a sheet of waxed paper onto which the letters just stick, so you can put them together the right way before putting some sticky tape over them and transfer them to wherever you actually want the letters. For these dry transfers it was slightly more difficult, of course, but the same method, essentially.Nice work on those numbers, neat way of doing them.
Glad to have been able to supply material for thatAnother tip to put into the note book , which is turning into a encyclopaedia !
Looking good Jakko.
Thanks, both Not sure of fun as such with the tracks, I’ve already learned that you need to be careful cutting off the outer two bits, so you don’t damage the hole for the pin — if you do, the pin may come out and the track falls apart. I had to superglue them in on one link (so far) because of this, since my normal plastic cement doesn’t seem to want to dissolve this particular plastic. I thought it was ABS but the side of the box says PS, but if true, it’s a harder polystyrene than normal for model kits.All looking mighty fine have fun with the tracks.
That and the holidays, I suspect. I ordered them onGlad the track arrived. A frustrating wait but worth it. Maybe there was a delay somewhere along the line due to Covid?
/me checks e-mails
6 December, from a shop that had them listed as in stock on their web site — if they hadn’t, I would have looked elsewhere. But then they apparently had to order them from their distributor, so why say on the site that they’re in stock?Maybe I should have thinned it a bit more still, in retrospect. But you (well, I) only figure that out by the time the airbrush stops working altogetherThe black crap looks good but airbrushes hate thick paint
To get you to place your order!why say on the site that they’re in stock?
Well, yes, of course It was more a rhetorical question.To get you to place your order!
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