Jim Cricket said:Rick, it's a combo of oak and/or ash framing, cedar planking, white pine blocking. Spars will be cherry, which I find is best for looking like aged fir, at this scale. As I have gained experience, I've realized that oak is a very poor scale material, because of it's coarseness. The part may be 1:8, but grain is still 1:1. so, in future, most of my framing will be poplar. I like Alaskan yellow cedar, but it's hard to find. I have a bunch of AYC veneer from which I've made custom plywood (1/16th" 3 ply), but the solid is harder to come by.
Thanks for the response, Jim! You've obviously put some thought into grain structure and application when the object of focus has been scaled down. I was forced to begin making the same considerations when I took-on a project to make a 1/30 scale copy of the McPherson Farm- barn, carriage house and farm house for placement in a diorama that focuses on the first half-day of battle at Gettysburg. I found a stone work source that was kind enough to tint his mastic the proper color, wood shingles sized to scale, wood doll house shutters cut and reworked to make the side-wall vents for the livestock level below the hay loft and grain storage portions. I had to fabricate the hand hewn beams that formed the floor joists for the second floor.-nearly finished and ready to rip lengthwise.
Still deep in the BW Outrage refurbish project, so much so that I still need to post pics of some tan cork scaup