Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Form 19 | 0 Comments - Click Here :

No. 5 and No. 6 pulling train #70 from Denver to Leadville, May 1934. Photo courtesy Robert Stears collection.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Someday... | 3 Comments - Click Here :

    Darel Leedy - Someday I hope to have the eagerness of a fire breathing steam locomotive. But for now my modeling enthusiasm feels more like an empty boxcar sitting in a lonely freight yard. Thank you to all of you who have made the discussion forum the place to congregate and keep my interest alive. Hopefully my Form 19 will be issued soon!

Leadville. Photo courtesy Robert Stears collection.

Monday, August 22, 2016

New C&S Passenger Car Book | 7 Comments - Click Here :


    Kenneth Martin is proud to announce here first on the C&Sn3, his new self published book of Colorado and Southern passenger car drawings.

Monday, July 18, 2016

Upcoming Webcomic: C&Sng with a Twist | 0 Comments - Click Here :

    Tom Coletti - I've been working on a special project over the last several years, and those with ties to the South Park may be particularly interested. "Wings & Strings" is a series which will follow the lives of a footplate crew working out of Como's great stone cathedral of a roundhouse at the turn of the century, just as the Colorado & Southern narrow gauge is coming into its own. The main characters are fictitious, but many notable South Park icons will flesh out the community, including senior engineer George "Jumbo" Miller, second-in-seniority Sam Speas, and others. Even the nameless shop crewmen and others from various C&S photograph archives will make cameo appearances.

    Many aspects of the C&S and daily life along the line will be faithfully recreated. However, there is one addition to the world in this series that allows it to occasionally wander from the historically fictitious into the truly fantastical:



    I've long held the idea that dragons and steam locomotives ought to have a setting in which they coexisted, due to the vast number of parallels between them: grand and fearsome breeds, oceans churning in their bellies, infernos raging in their hearts, their laborious breath thick with embers and soot, their large golden eyes beaming brightly as they fly across prairies wide and mountains tall. Yet a modern world has left both on the wayside, a sense of adventure and whimsy lost to time.


     Above are various in-progress scenes that I am working on for the comic. Since only two known photos exist of the roundhouse's interior during operations--and both are very rough and dark with limited perspective--I have instead opted to use Don Pacetti's fantastic HOn3 modeling of the roundhouse interior as a guide for placing machinery and other details, since the interior is shown with good lighting, high resolution, and multiple angles.

    Beyond just a simple webcomic format, a multi-media aspect comes into play in the form of a musical score--which will be written and performed myself--for each uploaded set of panels, as well as occasional small bits of animation to enhance certain scenes, like this gif of Brooks mogul No. 17, "Alma," which was written off the actual C&S books around 1902 but remains under the care of the comic's main characters, Lloyd & Luz O'Leary, pictured below. This engine was chosen to avoid writing over the stories of other C&S engineers and firemen, whom were very closely tied to specific engines from the active fleet.



    I'll continue to post updates to my main page, wings-and-strings.tumblr.com, and the comic's first chapter will be uploaded to wings-and-strings-comic.tumblr.com once it is ready. Often, I'll stream a live video feed of my art progress at https://picarto.tv/WingsAndStrings so that others can watch the comic's creation in real time. Anyone's welcome to join the stream when it's up, and you can follow either the main site or the Picarto channel to get notifications for when I'll be streaming. There's also a thread for this comic in the C&Sng Discussion Forum.

Thanks again to Darel and everyone else who has shown interest in this project,
~ Tom

Monday, May 9, 2016

Slacker | 0 Comments - Click Here :

Roper thanks Roy for the bump (-;

    Thanks to Jim Courtney, there is a new thread in the C&Sng Discussion Forum for views of the C&S in color. Here's hoping some never before published photos turn up! Regardless, it will be nice to have a collection of views in one location. Enjoy if you visit.

    Meanwhile, I'll try not to be such a slacker. But it's hard when I haven't been in a "railroady" mood of late. Roper himself could use a little help.

Monday, February 1, 2016

"Along the Blue" #30 | 0 Comments - Click Here :


    Keith Pashina sent this view to Roper from the November 9, 1905, Mining Reporter Magazine. The Gold Pan was a major customer on the C&S. More information and photos can be found in "Gold Pan Mining Company and Shops" by Maureen Nichols (Quandary Press 1994).

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Canned Ham | 0 Comments - Click Here :

   
    
    Darel Leedy - So, I wont be making as much progress on the layout as I had planned after all.
A barn find purchase over the holidays will keep me consumed for the foreseeable future. You can follow along on the blog I created to document the restoration process here: Aunt Bee's Canned Ham

    In the meantime, Roper will try to keep the C&Sn3 updated with an occasional post. And if anyone has something to share, by all means send it to him and he'll get it posted. He's a good dogie.

Now, Beau and I are heading back out to the garage.