Nelson, Thanks! That is a great reference! It really emphasizes your point - Fifty shades of Grey... Rich G [Attachment(s) from Nelson Moyer included below] I lined up my blackbirds for a photograph
I noted on Tru-Colors list of colors due next year consist of CB&Q gray belong on which locomotive. Should prove interesting. -- Original Message -- From: mailto:CBQ@yahoogroups.com rgortowski@aol.co
Author: "Gordon Smith kc2bw@optonline.net [CBQ]" <CBQ@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2016 16:29:36 -0400
The colors are being done from the societies color chips that were available some years ago. Gordon Smith -- Original Message -- -- Yahoo Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http:
I noted on Tru-Colors list of colors due next year consist of CB&Q gray belong on which locomotive. Should prove interesting. -- Original Message -- From: mailto:CBQ@yahoogroups.com rgortowski@aol
Great, now if the Society would provide those color chips to manufacturers producing CB&Q equipment, maybe we wouldn't have 'fifty shades of gray' on our models. Another example of color infidelity i
One of the big issues with paint color on models is that most models are now being painted in China, where the models are manufactured and assembled. In conversations with manufacture reps in the pas
I'm a long way from North America and live in the subtropics but the CB&Q has interested me since the mid sixties. Out here, our DELs used to be painted blue and grey and both colours faded very quic