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Combining Scales

Today I’ll discuss miniature scales, once again. However, this time I want to talk about making your multi-scale miniature collection work together.

If your Main collection/set up is 1:12 scale…

IF YOUR MAIN COLLECTION/SET UP IS a model train scale…

Use those larger props as advertisements and public art pieces. Or use the dolls’ dollhouse as an actual house set up next to all the train model N scale houses. Use the toys from your 1:12 dollhouse as actual people and vehicles in your train model set.

if you have a variety of model train scales…

Let perspective work for you. While this method is best used when photographing miniatures, if you place your train set up at eye level, it should also do the trick. We’re talking about a simple(ish) art based optical illusion.

When you look at your surroundings, say down a road, or across a field, pinpoint an object – a tree, house, etc. Now hold up your fingers, close one eye, and pretend your going to pinch that far away object. If we didn’t understand perspective, it would seem as if that item that’s far away was actually just something that’s really small.

Using that thinking/visual trick, set up a scene with your largest model train accessories closest to you, and your smallest one’s farther away. Yes, your N scale house may be quite a bit too small for your O scale people, but if it’s placed in the back of the set and we view the scene, or photograph the scene, at eye level, it will appear that the N scale house is just way far in the distance.

This may be too simplistic for some of you, and way confusing for others, so hopefully some photo examples will clear things up/make this post worth your while.

Use a shallow depth of field for these so the further away images blurs out, making it look even further from the in focus object.

The figures in this image are greatly different in size and were in reality only a couple of inches apart.

*While this technique will work with O, HO and N scale combined, and maybe if you have a big enough set, another scale above and below those, you can’t use this for say a 1:12 dollhouse and an N scale house. Those sizes are just too drastically different. Our eyes probably couldn’t see that far in the distance in real life when standing right next to our own houses – even if we did have supernatural eye sight, something would probably block our view – a hill, tree, another building, etc. So…try to stick to scale miniatures that are a bit closer in size.

Let’s get whimsical…

Maybe you like your miniatures a bit playful. Scale in your sets doesn’t always have to be accurate. Use that 1:12 dollhouse toy train as the actual train in your Z scale set – sure it looks like a toy and not a real train, but maybe that just makes the ride more fun for your Z scale people. You can also use larger and smaller scale items to make a point – “that bike is huge,” he said, and you use an HO scale figure next to a 1:12 scale bike to illustrate the point. Anything even slightly off scale will stand out, and sometimes that’s a good thing.


I hope this simplistic post helps spur some ideas.

Question, comment, something to add? Feel free to let me know below :)

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