One last shot from the holiday layout. Not sure how Fireman Fred braves the winter tempratures without his turnout coat, but he says he feels just fine.
Christmas is always a busy time here on the Blueboard Central. People have been coming and going, and with the kids out of school the energy level seems to be even higher.
I took a walk around town today with my Kodak Brownie and caught a few interesting sights. Today is the first day that the band that Nels Jameson (the town magnate and eccentric) hired to play for the skaters in the park was on site. He promised to have them play daily all the way through the Winter Frolic. I caught them as they were warming up at the depot parking lot.
And as they were practicing the lights on the town tree came on. Nels Jameson paid to have it brought in and erected too. Things are really begining to shape up for the Winter Frolic.
Thanks for the compliment fifedog. Your layout and photos have been a great inspiration.
Its been fun finding structures and figures and other accessories to bring life to the Blueboard Central.
I had originally intended to use buildings of the same vintage as the trains, but there are just too many nice looking things out there. This church actually looks very much like the one I attended as a child growing up in Chicago.
Enjoying the World’s Greatest Hobby
Northwoods Flyer
Northwoods…Holy Name Cathedral by chance? You are right…there are so many nice buildings out there for layouts. Among others, my wife has 3 Thomas Kincade lighted buildings for her under the tree display and, while they are too small scale-wise, they look beautiful with the trains running.
Not only that, but I finally opened the plastic on this gem, which I bought in 2005 or 2006. Hershey’s trolley by Bachmann in On30 scale running on HO track.
They operate totally differently, but when they meet up like this, all ideas of 'scale" get thrown out the window, and Christmas fun takes over.
While the church on my layout does look like Holy Name Catherdral, the church I attended was a much more modest Lutheran church in the Logan Square area.
It really only bears a faint resemblance to the porcelain building. Things that you remember from your childhood always seem larger and grander than they are in real life.
You have a great eye. Didn’t you grow up in inner city Chicago too?