Cheyenne
New Member
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2012
- Messages
- 41
I'm building a garage for a post apocalyptic dio thingie I've got perking in my melon .
I started with 1/4 inch artists/presentation foam core board , got my shape I wanted , then cut my doors and windows .
I used coffee stirs for the tounge and groove walls and 1/8th inch thick smooth cork for the cinder blocks .
Then I schmeered regular old house spackle on the cork and mortar joints .
Spackle shrinks so there was no need to score the mortar joints .
Covering the cork with an almost invisable layer of spackle will prevent primer and paint from soaking into the cork and giving it an uneven paint job .
However priming raw cork for a weathered look with out the spakle coat gives you a nice uneven look where some paint has soaked into the cork more than other areas .
I was really stumped on making a conventional garage door ala like in my house .
Then I remembered a gas station down the street from me has roll doors , ...... so I tried to fashion them .
Ok pics.











I started with 1/4 inch artists/presentation foam core board , got my shape I wanted , then cut my doors and windows .
I used coffee stirs for the tounge and groove walls and 1/8th inch thick smooth cork for the cinder blocks .
Then I schmeered regular old house spackle on the cork and mortar joints .
Spackle shrinks so there was no need to score the mortar joints .
Covering the cork with an almost invisable layer of spackle will prevent primer and paint from soaking into the cork and giving it an uneven paint job .
However priming raw cork for a weathered look with out the spakle coat gives you a nice uneven look where some paint has soaked into the cork more than other areas .
I was really stumped on making a conventional garage door ala like in my house .
Then I remembered a gas station down the street from me has roll doors , ...... so I tried to fashion them .
Ok pics.










