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My first Diorama, the story

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  • Member since
    November 2005
My first Diorama, the story
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, October 13, 2003 3:28 AM
So, you guys know I have my idea for a Diorama, but what is the description and background story? Well here’s the skinny:
We deployed to an un-disclosed location to make 5 buildings. They sent me, the plumber, to help the carpenters and electricians. Everyone is psyched to knock these structures out because we might not have to stay the full 6 months if we finish early. The kicker is, we only have enough steel to erect two buildings, and we are waiting on more steel to clear customs. Yeah, I said erect, get yer mind outta the gutter! We put up the first building, 103’ by 30’. No problem. Steel has not left the port. We knock out the second, same size. Still, we have no steel. We put up a third of the third building and ran out of steel. So the legendary REDHORSE unit is in theater, but with no materials; we can’t work. The powers that be task us to work on several projects inside the tent city, to include a movie screen/ backdrop and a two-story deck. BTW, the deck was sweet!!! So, we start loading our tools and equipment at the job site to bring back to the tent city, and someone grabs a sheet of plywood and spray paints a sign to display on our abandoned job site with partially complete building. The sign says, “Will work for steel!” The crane is shutdown and the place looks like a ghost town. We were all so mad at the fact that we were ready to rock, but had to extend our stay due to a hellacious logistical nightmare, the sign just felt so right being there. Those same powers to be felt differently, and the sign was gone a few hours later. We posed for a picture next to the sign with our pockets turned out and our hats extended in a panhandling fashion. The diorama with the sign as a centerpiece came immediately to mind.
The diorama, as I see it, will actually have several guys “on break” sitting near the unfinished building, trying to throw rocks into a hard hat (a very popular downtime activity). I really wanted a crane to be there, static display and all, but have yet to find one. The job site will be coned and roped off, as it was. The rope and chain rigging that kept the building square and plumb will be there, tied to unusable rolls of steel sitting on wooden pallets. Some AGE ground-crew equipment will be in there, as well as some shovels, oxy-acetylene rig, work bench that we built, and scratch built concrete forms with stakes and the turnbuckles that kept the forms straight. I suppose it’s best that the crane is not available, because I want the focus put on the “sign”. It is going to be the title of the diorama. I wanted to build a diorama that meant something to me, as well as something that is true to the era and technically accurate. This was a time that truly impacted my life. I missed Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, my second daughter’s birthday, and Valentine’s Day. My wife was nice enough to send me my 29th birthday card, which told me to enjoy the last year of my twenties! She’s so sweet!
So let me know if you have any suggestions to this, I have already recieved some great input towards the figures, but I would love to hear more suggestions towards it all. Thanks for reading this long, drawn out post!!
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, October 13, 2003 2:21 PM
I would love to see that picture, post it here or email it to me :)

OK here are my thoughts on your scene...

I told you about frankensteining your figures to find short sleeved subjects, but I do not now how to recreate the plumbers crack in the ****** region. That is going to be difficult.

Now that you have explained the scene, you may wish to make it in a smaller scale. 99% of the items you listed are construction based, and do not require military model kits to create. I know that many hobby stores have train sections with smaller scale items that would piece your whole scene together. Especially considering the crane, cones, and similar construction items that I know you can find on the train aisle. Also, woodland scenics now sells small figures that are very well detailed and painted that would fit your construction crew.

If you are going to make the deck, use popsicle sticks, matchsticks, chopsticks, etc and build it to look the same.

Even though the smaller scale items dont require as much assembly or painting, you will still have your hands full putting it all together and creating the ground work on a nice base.

good luck,
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, October 13, 2003 2:28 PM
Man, that sounds so familiar. All dressed up, locked and cocked, with now place to go. I hated that about the military. It just adds new meaning to the phrase "Hurry up and wait."
The dio you're planning sounds great. I would also like to get a picture of that, if available. Muzzle's ideas about doing it smaller scale have merit, and would require far less scratchbuilding than otherwise.
Good luck!

demono69
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Philippines
Posted by Dwight Ta-ala on Monday, October 13, 2003 8:32 PM
Sounds like a great dio. Should be something unique.

Good luck.

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, October 14, 2003 7:45 AM
I'll try to get a couple of the pics up today, I'm leaving tomorrow morning for a road project in Louisiana, should be back in mid-november. I'll be hitting the hobby shops in Bossier City and Shreveport while I'm down there. Thanks for the encouraging words and helpful insight. Loved the "plumbers crack" crack, muzzleflash!
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, October 14, 2003 9:59 AM
I lost the picture of us with the sign, hopefully I can get it from one of the other guys. Anyway, here's a link to some other pictures of the jobsite, enjoy:

http://www.angelfire.com/biz5/tokyoslim/desertpics.html
  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Dahlonega, Georgia
Posted by lizardqing on Tuesday, October 14, 2003 11:15 AM
That would be pretty neat to see done. Like the pic of the wheelbarrow. Don;t know how many times I have used one for a chair. Actually kind of comfortable and make a great windbreak on those cold days, allthough probally were'nt many of those in the desert.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, November 20, 2003 9:38 PM
Just wanted to check in with you guys. This project I have been on here in Louisiana is taking longer than expected. We should finish here in the next two weeks, then the long drive from LA to Montana. I haven’t forgotten about my dio, and will be buying materials to start as soon as I get home. I thank you guys for all your help and interest in my project. For now, the only thing I can do in return is tell you there is an extensive museum here at Barksdale AFB, home of the 8th Airforce. There are planes from WWII and Korea here, so if you want pics of a specific plane, let me know on this forum and I will get pics. I drive by them all everyday. Sorry I can’t tell you what they do have here because I only know the planes I am most likely to ride on, but maybe I can get a list from the base historian and post it here later. Some of them have missing engines and wear, so this may be resourceful for the diorama ideas some of you may have.
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