At this point, these are sold as kits for straight or curved modules. The straights are meant for Kato 20-020 4-7/8" straight sections, while the curves are meant for Kato 20-172 7" curve sections. These are sharp -- the equivalent of less than 15" in HO -- but N scale GP style locos and 50-foot boxcars will run on them.
Module kits are available on eBay from US and Japan sources, as well as from Amazon, and apparently from a Kato US web site. However, they can be pretty expensive from some sources. The least expensive are US-made clones from Klawndyke's. I've found that these are robust, high-quality products, and he fills orders promptly.
Kato USA has a video on assembling their module kit:
And another one on adding scenery to a completed module kit: There are other videos like this one that show how to use relatively inexpensive scenery materials from Michaels or Hobby Lobby to finish a basic module kit. The use of materials like modeling clay makes these modules a somewhat "arty" project. Another is the shape of the modules, which encourages the artistic quality of asymmetry.There's also the similarity of the N scale mini diorama modules to the bonsai hobby, in which a plant is kept in a dwarf form and pruned into an artistic shape. In modules as small as these, there's a need to evoke the sense of something larger with artistic techniques.
This strrikes me as a fascinating recent development in the hobby, which I want to follow up.
This is an interesting concept and I agree with the comparisons to Bonsai, except for one aspect - the base. I Bonsai plants and the pot really is a crucial element. The unfinished laser-cut base of these dioramas is distracting, in my opinion. But if it works as a gateway to model making or scenery work, terrific.
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