Painting letters with one shot planters enamel the right way!

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Komentáře • 23

  • @daytonaflorida2247
    @daytonaflorida2247 Před 9 měsíci +6

    "Surface Tension" is the term you were looking for.

  • @artefresko2643
    @artefresko2643 Před rokem +2

    Great Tips. Short & Sweet. Copious was a great choice of words. Thanks.

  • @kec8582
    @kec8582 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Exactly how I found to do it for my sandblasted sign foam signs. Use self leveling sign paint like 1 shot or ronan's

  • @lpsg405
    @lpsg405 Před 2 lety +3

    I call it a “flood coat”.

  • @kevinmiller2640
    @kevinmiller2640 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Big fan of your signs and content. What kind of spraying setup do you use for the base of these signs? I was curious if you have any recommendations of spray guns that are on the market.

  • @timriddle1401
    @timriddle1401 Před rokem

    Great video

  • @catat9442
    @catat9442 Před rokem

    Meniscus! Thank you for this!

  • @donalda777
    @donalda777 Před 2 lety +5

    Surface tension

    • @signsbyvan
      @signsbyvan  Před 2 lety +1

      That's it! :).......too many hours.....brain wasn't working. Thank You!

    • @sandmandave2008
      @sandmandave2008 Před 2 lety

      I gave up on One Shot when I painted some golf course 3D tee sign borders with One Shot dark green and in two seasons (that’s 10 total months of exposure in a far northern climate) there were blue streaks all over the borders. The explanation I got from a paint chemist is that One Shot switched to cheap Chinese pigments and the yellow pigment in the green was being bleached out at an accelerated rate leaving the blue still visible. I used to get ten years of good coverage with One Shot. Those days started disappearing when One Shot started being sold to corporate bean counters. I’ve gone all latex and Mack Brush Co. has some really nice quills that lay latex paint down smoothly.

  • @joedelich7168
    @joedelich7168 Před 3 měsíci

    A meniscus also describes that effect well.

  • @TheopticnerveX
    @TheopticnerveX Před rokem +1

    "loading" the brush means using more paint.

  • @davidkennison8022
    @davidkennison8022 Před rokem

    Hey great info in the video. Couple questions, what material do you use for your signs (sign foam?) And do you use CNC to make them? Thanks!

    • @signsbyvan
      @signsbyvan  Před rokem +1

      Corafoam made by HDU. Yes.....a morbidelli M100 made by SCM. Your Welcome!

    • @signsbyvan
      @signsbyvan  Před rokem

      Yes. Corafoam made by Duna USA. And yes we use CNC router for most of our signs.

  • @user-px9gb2qt3x
    @user-px9gb2qt3x Před 11 měsíci

    For a white glossy background what do you use, if using One shot enamels on top?

    • @signsbyvan
      @signsbyvan  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Use a white egg shell or semi gloss Behr Ultra Premium paint and spray it. Then use a flat water base letter color.

  • @chrishayes5755
    @chrishayes5755 Před 8 měsíci

    my issue is that if I put on a thick coat like that I get wrinkles and also the paint doesnt necessarily even out super well. if I put the paint on thinner it gets some kind of very small bubbles or blisters that ruin the finish. I've only tried black so far, it's been nothing but problems tbh. 20+ split tests and I'm still unable to fix it so far. I'm thinking of thinning it.

    • @signsbyvan
      @signsbyvan  Před 8 měsíci

      What are you painting on? It sounds like a common problem with two materials not jiving.

  • @RealDapperDude
    @RealDapperDude Před 8 měsíci

    Surface tension.

  • @Master.signage_
    @Master.signage_ Před 7 měsíci

    How do you get people to buy your signs?

  • @AbnormalArtsDOTcom
    @AbnormalArtsDOTcom Před rokem

    The term you couldn't remember is "doming" (I have short-term memory loss too... lol). It creates that just-perfect amount of water (or paint) in the dog bowl that with one more drop, would go over the edge... lol. Doming is a term jewelry makers use when putting a coat of epoxy or other coating on the face of at item. It creates that rounded dome-style coat that goes all the way to the edge of an item, without spilling over the edge.