August 20th, 2005, 16:18 | #1 |
a.k.a. Fury a.k.a. VipaMave
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Coloring the engravings on the rifle
More questions about paint :P
I was wondering how I would go about painting the colt engravings on my G&P M4A1. It seems difficult but I have some spare time. Best way to do this? Thanks-VM |
August 20th, 2005, 16:35 | #2 |
E-30
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I have a very good way to do it;
- Apply some paint all over the engravings with a medium size brush, even if it has to go on the body itself - Make sure the engraving are fulled with paint - Take a clean & dry cloth, apply few drop of Acetone - Wipe off the excedent paint on the body, letting the engravings untouched This technique has been applied on my MP5K and my AK, and the results are awesome. Some people have been painting the engravings with precision brushes, but IMO it takes to much time, and the finish may be not as great as the one shown above. Cheers !
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August 20th, 2005, 16:45 | #3 |
a.k.a. Fury a.k.a. VipaMave
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Wow, great idea. What type of paint did you use?
Thanks for the great reply-VM |
August 20th, 2005, 16:55 | #4 |
Official ASC Bladesmith
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White Crayola crayon. Rub it on in all directions so the crayon goes perpendicular to the lines and all have been filled, then rub your finger vigourously over top to rub off excess crayon. All that will be left is what is in the lines. Did it to all my guns last year, still shows white. Dirt cheap and painless too.
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August 20th, 2005, 17:12 | #5 | |
E-30
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Quote:
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October 21st, 2005, 03:28 | #6 |
I used a tooth pick and just wiped off any excess spots right away turned out well. Though it did take a few coats to get it right and was somewhat time consuming. I like the crayola idea!
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Those who beat their swords into plow shares, usually end up plowing for those who didn't. |
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October 21st, 2005, 13:08 | #7 |
Mix some paint thinner with the paint and just tuch the letter and the paint thinner will run through the letter.
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October 21st, 2005, 16:58 | #8 | |
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That's exactly what I was gonna suggest, works fab, I've done a number of projects like that, not guns, but similar situations. Most effective way IMO, and yeah, like you said, testors works great for it. I love that stuff for small work. |
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October 21st, 2005, 18:56 | #9 | |
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Woah all I can say is WOW!!!! It makes total sence... crayons are cheap and everyone got them hanging around the house!! Finaly the white ones are usefull. I missed your post when I 1st posted but this works great!! I decided to try this on my M3 this moarning and it worked out vary well!! Photos are here but they are a little blury. http://www.airsoftcanada.com/showthr...793#post227793 |
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October 22nd, 2005, 13:58 | #10 |
Oil pastels work better. They are softer and waterproof. You may have to wet a rag to wipe the excess off the receiver though.
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January 25th, 2006, 02:53 | #11 |
you know if you go to any art store they have grease pens there i believe you can get them at Hardware stores to but they arent as good all you do is color all over the spot you want to fill in and i mean all over then you wait a little bit like 2 min. and wipe off the excess and they come in a variety of colors and its water proof and perm. almost exactly like the crayon but it gives a look like paint wet paint but its not.
ps. i do it to all my dog tags like my black ones are filled with white and my silver ones are filled with black to give them an old look. turns out great. |
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April 4th, 2006, 14:50 | #12 |
If you havent done so already...here is the best way..buy a white crayon just smudge the crayon over the engravings (so the wax fills the markings) then take a warm cloth and whipe away the excess around the egravings...voila.
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July 29th, 2006, 08:37 | #13 | |
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My own technique involves enamel model paint, a soft polishing cloth(A tissue won't work good), fine grit sandpaper(300 all the way to 600) and patience. First, slop the paint onto the engraving, wait about one minute, take the polishing cloth and wipe off all of the paint on the outside. some paint will remain, but don't worry. Let the paint dry a few hours, or overnight, if you wish. when the paint is nice and dry, take the 300 grit sandpaper, sand off the paint that is around the engraving, working your way to 600 grit. If you wish for a real smooth finish, use some automotive sandpaper. The stuff that goes down to 2000 grit. It's a little more complicated than the crayon trick, but it works well. In this example I used 3 in 1 house oil to lubricate the wet-or-dry sandpaper. It gave a better finish than just water. |
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August 11th, 2006, 04:21 | #14 |
i just use a white out pen on my P90..took me like 10minutes
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August 6th, 2007, 19:26 | #15 |
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