Shown here is Captain Nemo's "Seafood and Saltwater Salvage Railroad" with submersible locomotive, which Walas created from "the boiler from a Bachmann ten-wheeler" and "an Aristo-craft motor block." I have no idea what that means, but I know genius when I see it. (Plastic Easter eggs, a brass anchor, a drinking straw, and a seashell were also involved.) Its salt- and barnacle-encrusted exterior was created from sand and glitter mixed with acrylic paint.
From Journals of GMM: "Chris Walas makes model trains and creatures in his own alternate universe, consisting of vampires, terminators in rail wheelchairs, Victorian steampunk locomotives, Halloween skeletons, early sci-fi lunar rockets... I give up, if it is cool, Chris has modelled it."
From Table of Malcontents: "When steampunk crashes in head-on collision with model train enthusiasm, you get Chris Walas' rusty, corroded, and incredible creations. Walas' creations exist in a fictional micro-realm called Rogue County, where 19th century Americana meets the super-science villains, protagonists, and inventions of Victorian literature. Captain Nemo has converted his submarine into a locomotive in this universe, and someone appears to have captured Oz's Tock and put him on rails."
From Brass Goggles: "What that man does with blue foam, mustard seeds, and a hefty lick of paint puts a whole new perspective on what can be done with some ingenuity and inspiration! Please also take a look at the collaborative effort that he was part of to create Futuropolis - complete with ‘Verne Engine’ and a flying copper airship. More steampunk than a brass bucket of goggles."
Shown here: The "Jules Verne" engine.
3 comments:
I like the cut of your steam-jib! Some logical nonsense, this!
Huzzah, good sirs!! Huzzah!
Did a little design work myself on a short lived series on Sci Fi called THE SECRET ADVENTURES OF JULES VERNE. Got in a few wild ones before we ran the piggy bank dry.
This has to be one of the neatest sites on the web. The pictures---real good and the stories too. I will pass around---also!
A new book is out by Kenneth and Mary Lou Reed about Railroad History. They worked real hard on the book and I love it.
The book is a collection of some of Kenneth’s experiences as a fireman on the Evansville, Indianapolis and Terre Haute line of the New York Central Railroad. I started firing steam engines when I was 18 years old in 1953. It is also a compilation of writings and history of the Evansville and Indianapolis Railroad.
To learn more go to:
http://www.klreed.com/
Thanks Deborah
Chris Walas has been at this for a long while, with magnificent results. He featured regularly in the much missed "AWNUTS" magazine (Always Whimsical, Not Usually To Scale)
So did I, occasionally!
I focussed on the British mad genius, Mr Rowland Emett. See:
http://www.picturetrail.com/emettplus
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