Rather than playing “Chicken Little” (sky falling…), I did
the opposite for the wall the major mountain grade is mounted on. I applied my standard multi-band sky
treatment (http://espeecascades.blogspot.com/2012/11/backdrop-sky.html)to
about sixty feet of wall. This
completes my expected sky treatment on walls, as I do not expect to need any
sky color behind Cascade summit—the terrain will reach the ceiling before the
wall behind that scene. I
remembered how applying the sky treatment immediately transformed a layout area
when I applied that treatment to the McCredie Springs “nook” area last summer. Completing that effect for the rest of
the railroad has been on my active list since that time, but operating features
of the railroad always took precedence—right up until my enforced operations
break this winter. (http://espeecascades.blogspot.com/2016/01/house-maintenance-pause.html)
Sky treatment applied to wall
behind Cruzatte.
Cruzatte wall before the sky
treatment.
Completed sky treatment blends with previously applied sky
treatment in the nook to the left.
Sky treatment extends to the
Salt Creek Trestle scene.
The next step will be a basic hillside treatment
approximating where I expect to build up the terrain and extend the tree line
above that. Meanwhile my operating
crew and I (whenever that happens again!) can enjoy the introduction of this
real world element to the layout space.
I have already seen how my eye and brain accept the completed sky as
belonging there, even when viewed above the backdrop spine behind Springfield.
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