Neil
Western Thunderer
.... is charcoal grey. It seems that these days we all look longingly back to the days when Britain's economy had a strong manufacturing component. Politicians tinker to try and shift the balance towards it, media commentates on their success or otherwise and (not so) old farts like me spout forth about the days when we built planes , trains and automobiles. However I'm old enough to remember that all this industry came with a cost and it looked like this. Now I happen to think there's some sort of magnificence in this and it's one that most railways set in urban territory during the days of steam fail to fully capture and I think that the reason is that our memories of how things were are diluted by the relative cleanliness of the current world. When I first met the first Mrs Rushby, she lived in a Lancashire mill town and the vogue for sandblasting a centuries worth of grime away from both civic buildings and private housing had just got under way. My childhood memories of Leeds and Keighley being black were being eroded by their own ambitions to be clean and modern. These days it's still possible to find urban areas not sandblasted clean (there are a few buildings near Manchester Victoria that have dirty faces) but the cause of the grime is long gone and many years worth of rain has fallen. I have an idea that modellers if not acting on the simplistic notion that bricks are brick coloured select paints based on some averaging out of how towns are now and photos of how towns were. Haranguing isn't very productive so I'll leave with a suggestion. Remember the photo of Bradford? Irfanview (and I'd guess other image handling software) has a range of effects that can be applied at the click of a button. In this case it's the oil paint function that comes to our rescue. Dialled up to near maximum abstraction it gives this result, from which it's easy to pick out the dominant colour.



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This applies as much to early diesel-era layouts as steam, as well.

that wall would have a hundred odd years of muck on it.....