Painting a pedal with model paint
Moderated By: mods
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- Joined: Fri Nov 20, 2009 2:37 am
- Location: Chicago
Painting a pedal with model paint
Has anyone ever painted a pedal with hobby model paint as in Testors paint? The dilemma I have is that I live in Chicago where it is illegal to sell spray paint in the vicinity of the city. I used to put model cars together as a kid and I recall the painting coming out fairly well. What do you guys think?
If you're talking about the rattle can testors stuff, then you should he great. If you're talking about the brush on stuff, it can be done well, just make sure to get enough on, the wet sand the strokes out and make it flat, then polish, have a friend buff it or whatever. What are you using for primer?
you can't buy spray paint in chicago? i thought things were bad here. they just keep it locked up and card you if you want to buy any. although i recently found you can't buy aniline dyes in the state of california. i was gonna use it to do a sunburst finish. i guess i'll have to get some next time i'm in nevada.
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I ended up being able to catch a ride to the suburbs and I was able to score a sweet key lime green. I'll post pictures after I wet-sand it.
Yeah, they banned spray paint in the city of chicago a number of years ago, so its pretty shitty for anyone who doesn't paint graffiti.
I just used Krylon Primer.
Yeah, they banned spray paint in the city of chicago a number of years ago, so its pretty shitty for anyone who doesn't paint graffiti.
I just used Krylon Primer.
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
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Enamels are awful paints. I never, ever use enamels. You're better off laying down an acrylic primer, car primer works best, and using acrylics instead. It depends how complicated your design is, though. If you're just painting things like "tone, volume" and stuff, then stick to enamels. But some sort of full design all over a metal case will need acrylics covered in a gloss/satin/matt coat. When enamels chip, they chip bad.
Also: HATE TESTORS.
Also: HATE TESTORS.
Brandon W wrote:you elites.
+1. Enamels are horrible to work with because they take forever to dry, especially in cold weather. Acrylics are lovely. Find some waterbased if you can find some. I vouch for EK, car paint works as well, but if you must use enamels, Krylons are cheap and work fine, but may take longer to dry in cold weather. Also, make sure you get a clearcoat with the same material base (acrylic paint to acrylic clear) or you may get a weird funky texture. You don't need to prime and sand, but I like to because it gives your paints a nice smooth look.ekwatts wrote:Enamels are awful paints. I never, ever use enamels. You're better off laying down an acrylic primer, car primer works best, and using acrylics instead.
My pedal painting resume a la Dwarfcraft Secret Destroyers:
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