British Railway Modelling (BRM)

Modelling weeds

Whether modelling an urban or a rural scene, plants, trees, and grasses will almost always be featured somewhere on a model railway, particularly when modelling today’s railways where weeds and Buddleia seem to grow almost everywhere along the side of the tracks. Modelling the natural landscape is often one of the most enjoyable aspects of layout building, but it can also be

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from British Railway Modelling (BRM)

British Railway Modelling (BRM)1 min read
A New Heritage Attraction
Due to open in summer 2024 and set across 7.5 acres of historic railway land in the heart of Darlington, the new visitor attraction celebrates and promotes Darlington's proud 200-year railway heritage. Nestled amongst early railway buildings, includi
British Railway Modelling (BRM)4 min read
Build A Steam-era Bus Stop
WE ARE bombarded with ‘new’ products these days, which is wonderful, but do those products that older modellers remember still have a place on our layouts? This thought came to me when working on last month's water diorama. To fill in the background,
British Railway Modelling (BRM)1 min read
Hornby Railroad 45T SAA Steel Carrier Wagon Arrives
New to Hornby's Railroad range is the 45T SAA steel carrier wagon in a red/grey Railfreight livery, and it is available to order now. This model traces its roots back to the 1970s, with a chassis common to its VDA and OBA wagons of similar vintage wi

Related