Perhaps they make it from newspapers.  Would explain the light gray color.
Charles Weston

--- On Wed, 3/21/12, David Engle <[email protected]> wrote:

From: David Engle <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Homasote Board
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, March 21, 2012, 3:20 PM
















 



  


    
      
      
      


I'm beginning to think that homosote and homobed 
are different items in different areas of the country.  What is sold as 
homosote in this area is a medium light gray  at its darkest.  Is it 
not a byproduct of the paper industry as it is?  DJE
 
 

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2012 1:48 
  PM
  Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Homasote 
  Board
  
  
  
  
      Josh Seltzer and I used to make  lots of 
  this stuff using either spray paint OR RIT Dye. the RIT works just as well 
but 
  seems to take forever to completely dry. As for the normal color of the 
  Homosote, I suppose you could compensate for this factor and still come up 
  with any shade you wish. The lightest color we ever made was for Goldenrod, a 
  light yellow color.
      Even better, make a couple of different shades 
  and sprinkle them separately when you scenic a section. Nature never was 
  uniform anyway, and the more color variations you have the better your 
scenery 
  will look. Plus you aren't paying twelve bucks for a bottle of canned ground 
  cover in a hobby shop 
  somewhere.           
   Lee McCarty
   
  
  In a message dated 3/21/2012 11:23:44 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
  [email protected] writes:
  Interesting to try but since homosote is already a dark color it 
    may not 
take dye and look right like sawdust 
    does.

Carey

Carey Probst

Member, M.I.T. Educational 
    Council

S Scale, Sn3 and S High Rail/AF

A well regulated 
    militia being necessary to the security of a free State,

the right of 
    the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.


On 
    3/21/2012 10:46 AM, Jeffrey Madden wrote:
>
> Another thought 
    might be to mix in RIT dye instead of spraying with 
> paint.  I 
    used to do this with sawdust, and it worked pretty good.  
> Mix 
    in water, dye and Homasote shavings, dump on plastic outside in 
> sun 
    to dry.  I'm not sure if this will really work - 'cause not sure 
    
> of the Homasote absorbtion, but if it worked with sawdust, it 
    should 
> work.  Try a bit anyway.  Jeff 
    Madden
>
> On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 12:17 AM, Track Tools LLc 
    
> <[email protected] 
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>  
       *From:*[email protected] 
    <mailto:[email protected]>
>     
    [mailto:[email protected] 
    <mailto:[email protected]>]
>     *On 
    Behalf Of *[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>  
       *Sent:* Tuesday, March 20, 2012 2:25 PM
>  
       *To:* [email protected] 
    <mailto:[email protected]>
>     *Subject:* 
    Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Homasote Board
>
>     Lee 
    McCarty writes: “Since you are all talking about the use of
>  
       Homosote, may I inject a quick suggestion about the dust that 
    is
>     created when you cut the stuff. Carefully 
    collect as much of the
>     dust as you can, put it 
    into an empty five gallon bucket, spray
>     paint it 
    with any earth color you wish, any natural light brown,
>  
       green, flax color, whatever earth colors you want on your 
    layout.
>     Keep spraying until everything in the 
    bucket is colored, then let
>     it all dry, stirring 
    occasionally to break up clumps. When it is
>     dried 
    you will have a wonderful source of ground cover in small to
>  
       large lumps that convert into field bushes, high grass, 
    almost
>     anywhere you want ground cover. You can 
    even spray twigs with
>     spray glue, roll them into 
    the material, and you have instant
>     deciduous 
    trees and bushes. It also last forever and never gets
>  
       hard or flakey.”
>
>     I love the 
    idea!
>
>     For those of you who are having a 
    hard time visualizing this mess,
>     think dust 
    bunnies from under the bed but with the caveat that you
>  
       know from whence they came!
>
>     
    Since cutting up homasote is not an everyday affair this is 
    one
>     that ought to be put to an article somewhere 
    as it has some real
>     
    possibilities!
>
>     Lee 
    Kleidon
>
>     Tracktools 
    LLc
>
>     Westminster, 
    CO
>
>
> 
    



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