paint effects

Place to put those little tricks or parts you used during the restoration of your roadster.

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msampsel
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Re: paint effects

Post by msampsel »

Krylon makes a winkle paint too you can probably find various examples of the different type of wrinkle paint.
Checked my engine paint and it is not as wrinkled as I thought.

Eastwood makes a wrinkle paint too, does not say anything about heating. Suspect the VHT wrinkles
whether you cure it or not (suspect the 200 degrees is just so it can withstand 350 degrees), their header paint requires some serious heat to cure.
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ed B
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

I just looked at it, the wrinkle effect is dramatic, way more than the original micro ball peen effect it had before. I may try to put it in the oven as they said it may reduce the wrinkle effect. I'm thinking I may have to sand it down later and recoat with some regular flat over it as it is very wrinkled and glossy, not a pretty sight at all at the moment.
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msampsel
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Re: paint effects

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ed B wrote:I just looked at it, the wrinkle effect is dramatic, way more than the original micro ball peen effect it had before. I may try to put it in the oven as they said it may reduce the wrinkle effect. I'm thinking I may have to sand it down later and recoat with some regular flat over it as it is very wrinkled and glossy, not a pretty sight at all at the moment.
Humm well with my home, the BBQ is a good alternative for heat!
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bakerjf
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Re: paint effects

Post by bakerjf »

Mine is not glossy - don't know what happened there?
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Re: paint effects

Post by Poobah »

ACE hardware has a spray paint that supposedly has the Hammered look. I have not used it though.

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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

Thanks. Ill look at Ace as well. I guess I should have experimented on a trial piece first. I just very lightly sanded a part of it (sanding around and in the round holes will be a chore) and it knocked it down a good bit, but it is still soft so will probably need to wait a few days or heat it to cure. I followed the directions saying to put down at least 3 heavy coats seperated by 5 minutes each, alternating the directions. Maybe I should not have done the heavy coats or all three directions.
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

I've attached a photo of how the effect looks and also after I knocked it down a bit.
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bakerjf
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Re: paint effects

Post by bakerjf »

Looks like too much paint.
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spl310
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Re: paint effects

Post by spl310 »

I agree. Too heavily applied
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Re: paint effects

Post by greydog »

I've found that using a heat gun works well. With a little practice, you can control the amount of wrinkle.
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

spl310 wrote:I agree. Too heavily applied
Now you all tell me :). I just followed the directions. Normally spray cans say light coats, yet this one specifically said 'heavy" coats.
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

greydog wrote:I've found that using a heat gun works well. With a little practice, you can control the amount of wrinkle.
Dan
I was wondering if a heat gun could be used instead of putting it in the oven.
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

spl310 wrote:I agree. Too heavily applied
bakerjf wrote:Looks like too much paint.
Well I removed all the paint and started over. I tried experimenting using other paints. Tried flat black with various textures using cloth or paper towels, I tried texture paint and did not like any of the results. I then tried a Hammered finished which I really liked. However when it dried it turned from black to gray and was glossy, so I sprayed over it with a thin layer of flat black, but even that light coat was enough to negate the Hammered paint effect.

So I went back to the VHT Wrinkle Plus paint. I found that 2 to 3 light coats followed by the use of a heat gun worked best. It took a few tries to get it to where I liked it. You just had to cover the area you did not like with another light coat and apply the heat gun until it looked good (no need to remove or sand the existing coat).
I've attached a photo of my finished product.
after-20160611_174108_resized.jpg
I then went onto recovering the center console that holds the plate. I placed the vinyl in the sun for a while to get it more flexible and then sprayed on the adhesive and stretched the fabric over the console. I found I could get it to fit ok on the concave areas but not the convex area on the top portions. I could not find a way to shrink it. I finally ended up adding a fold to the top.
When it dried and cooled I found many stretch wrinkles appeared on the lower curve area, where it had been stretched to fit. I was goning to tear it off and try agin, but then recalled a tool I had that may help. About 30 years ago when I used to fly RC model planes we used to cover the wing surfaces with a mylar material and then heat it to remove wrinkles and melt the seams. I figured it was worth a try. It worked pretty well and got most of the wrinkles out from that stretched area near the bottom curve. I reassembled the console and repainted the lettering on the switch knobs and it looks pretty good. I've attached a before and after photo as well as the Tower Hobby Sealing iron.
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Last edited by ed B on Tue Jun 14, 2016 6:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
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bakerjf
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Re: paint effects

Post by bakerjf »

So much better!
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Re: paint effects

Post by ed B »

Thanks!
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