Plasticville Gallery
Plasticville Gallery
Lots of folks have Plasticville on the layout, some even collect it. I had a lot of Plasticville when I was a kid...some has survived until today. If you have any pieces in the collection post a pic here and tell us about it.
Here's a Plasticville Fire House, kit FH-4, that I have hung onto for a very long time: Somewhere along the way it was given an over-spray of off-white, black paint for the out-of-box red roof, a gloss red siren, a concrete-colored tower cap and thresholds for the bay-doors. The ladder truck and pumper are long gone.
Paul II
Here's a Plasticville Fire House, kit FH-4, that I have hung onto for a very long time: Somewhere along the way it was given an over-spray of off-white, black paint for the out-of-box red roof, a gloss red siren, a concrete-colored tower cap and thresholds for the bay-doors. The ladder truck and pumper are long gone.
Paul II
Last edited by winced36 on Tue Jul 21, 2020 1:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Plasticville Gallery
Paul, I used the big white station, the switch tower, the freight station, and the Cape Cod on my AF RR in the 1960s. I painted them all to get rid of that silly plastic sheen. With the exception of the Cape Cod, which I thought was badly proportioned, they all looked pretty nice with my AF trains.
Re: Plasticville Gallery
Me too, Paul...I always thought that the nicest of the Plasticville kits were more appropriately sized for S-gauge. I still have a bunch of Plasticville about, although very little of it is used on the layout. My favorite piece was/is the SW-2 switch/interlocking tower, which I still have:
Offered as suitable for both O-gauge and S-gauge, many of these tower kits included a "Plasticville" sign on the roof, but this one, a later version, did not. I painted it in what I considered more prototypical colors, put acetate in the window frames (although most of that has fallen out now and needs to be replaced). With a bit of imagination, one can do a lot with some of the Plasticville kits.
Don't forget the window shades...
I had it cemented on a masonite base, but I've recently pulled it off intending to re-base it for the current layout.Offered as suitable for both O-gauge and S-gauge, many of these tower kits included a "Plasticville" sign on the roof, but this one, a later version, did not. I painted it in what I considered more prototypical colors, put acetate in the window frames (although most of that has fallen out now and needs to be replaced). With a bit of imagination, one can do a lot with some of the Plasticville kits.
Don't forget the window shades...
Re: Plasticville Gallery
An online guide to Plasticville paper:
http://www.plasticvilleusa.org/memberso ... index.html
Lots of good information on the PCA website.
Paul
http://www.plasticvilleusa.org/memberso ... index.html
Lots of good information on the PCA website.
Paul
Re: Plasticville Gallery
A late version of the Plasticville diner:
This was purchased used and was in pretty rough shape. This version originally had a chrome finish on it, but much of that had chipped away from heavy play-use. I repainted it "steel", hoping for a stainless look, then gave the red roof a shot of matte black. Lastly, the window blinds, a feature of many real diners, I painted an off-white. It needs some acetate in the windows, and it cries out for a detailed, illuminated interior...maybe some day.Re: Plasticville Gallery
Probably a decade or more ago, I picked up one of the Plasticville "Trestle Bridge" kits at Strickler's Hobby Shop in Hanover, Pennsylvania. At the time I had visions of building a second level on the layout, but I've not got around to doing that (not even sure I want to pursue it at this point). The kit, a nice model of a "Baltimore" truss bridge, remains in the box, one that has seen quite an evolution over the years:
Strickler's closed a few years ago when the owner passed away. I bought quite a few pieces from Lorne Strickler over the years, including a lot of Flyer S-gauge parts and plastic models. His was the last traditional hobby shop in my area, and it is missed.
Paul II
According to the box, Plasticville has been in production since 1947, the beginning of the postwar boom in toy-train production. By the late 1950s, the boom was starting to fizzle out. More than seven decades in, however, Bachmann presumably is still making the Plasticville stuff.Strickler's closed a few years ago when the owner passed away. I bought quite a few pieces from Lorne Strickler over the years, including a lot of Flyer S-gauge parts and plastic models. His was the last traditional hobby shop in my area, and it is missed.
Paul II
Re: Plasticville Gallery
Vintage Plasticville under the tree: