This is a model that I did not build. I bought it from someone else who built it, but he did a real rough job in doing so. I completely remodeled it, detailed it, added cupolas that I designed, as well added ventilators, windows, and cross buck details for the doors. I also added the white wooden vertical wall corner mouldings, as well. I smoothed over all the uneven joints, and added a piece of plywood to the bottom of the model to give it more structural integrity. I painted on by hand the stone details for the foundation, and the barn hill retainer walls. I repainted the roof edges white, from gray. Added two cross buck doors to the livestock barnyard side of the barn, as well as adding windows there. This model is rather large, as it is 15" long, measuring from gable to gable, and adding the roof overhang, and about 12" high at the roof peak and 13" wide, measuring at the gable end roof overhangs. The model is mostly made of painted 3/8",and 7/16" rough hewn scrap plywood, and skid slat wood construction, with painted solid maple wood cupola assemblies. The ventilator assemblies with their louvre slats on the cupolas, as well as on the barn's walls themselves, window frames, and cross buck door trim mouldings are all made from heavy gauge cardboard, and mat board material, and painted the colors as needed. The model's front and rear cross buck doors open and close on jewelry box hinges, painted white to match the rest of the barn's trim, and the door handles are tiny cuphooks screwed into the doors, painted aluminum. The "glass" in the six actual window openings in the barn is clear polystyrene plastic. The two windows on the livestock level are false windows. The guy who originally designed the overall configuration of this barn did not cut window openings there. There are only six actual window openings in the upper levels of the barn. The overall height of the barn at the central cupola weathervane lightning rod is 17-3/4". Living in Lancaster County, PA, I have seen lots of bank barns of this fancy style when I was a kid, all almost every one of them are gone, now. Victims of overdevelopement. This is not a model of any one specific barn, but of a menagerie of several barns that I remember from when I was a kid, and also a Plain friend that I work with, who gave me some pointers, and recolletions of barns his friends and relatives have, or did have.
This model was originally built to be a farm play toy, but I turned it into what would be in real life an agricultural Taj Mahal.
I got the model in October of 2010, last year, and I just put the finishing touches on it yesterday, May 15, 2011.
Here are some pictures of the completed model.
Early working design drawings of the cupolas I did before making them.
Jim.
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