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Advice needed for painting latex handguards


Rich330

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Does anyone have any tips for painting genuine latex handguards?

I'd be grateful for any input. What would achieve the most accurate reproduction of the screen-used look (type of paint, primer/no primer? etc.)?

Cheers!

Edited by Rick330
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you have to mix latex and acrylic paint and apply smoothly.

 

I use mould builder latex.

 

I'm sure that gives you a great, lasting finish but I doubt very much that that was what they did on-set.

 

I'm not looking for the best and most durable paint job, I want the most authentic-looking finish, i.e. flaky and battered after a few uses is fine.

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You could try the kind of slightly thick paint you paint motives on clothes, like t-shirts with. I've used that on leather gloves and it holds up nicely being slightly "rubbery", but does crack over time. Shouldn't cost much to give it a try. Instructions for my paint say the motive should be "hardened" by ironing on it with some towel or something in between, but I don't think that's necessary, especially since you want it to crack a bit.

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HI Rich , i used on my laytex hand gaurds from R2DAN the plastic dip spray and it holds on preety well but now i have trooped quite a bit in them they have scuffed and chipped of in places looks more screen looking now any way heres a link if you go for it .

----

 

 

Cheers

Steve

Edited by gmrhodes13
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I once try humbrol, but it all crack up.

 

I have also try spray paint brands like:

Belton, Montana, Motip, nothing works.

 

We also have plasti kote here, i have the feeling it might be the best choice around here.

Do any one knows it, and if its a good choice:

----

Edited by gmrhodes13
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I believe the textile paint i mentioned is something like this, I recognize the bottle, -----

Edited by gmrhodes13
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On 12/2/2010 at 8:14 PM, Locitus said:

I believe the textile paint i mentioned is something like this, I recognize the bottle, ----

 

I've got something similar - it's what I used for the elastic on my boots.

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I once try humbrol, but it all crack up.

 

I have also try spray paint brands like:

Belton, Montana, Motip, nothing works.

 

 

THanks, Rolf. Good to know what not to try.

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a)The textile paint works well, I use something similar.

 

B) Another possibility is latex based houshold paint. Should bond quite well

 

c) acrrylic paint with a few drops of nail polish is another fine way.

 

I guess all 3 methods were around in '77 :)

 

And you can always weather the edges around the wrist yourself with some sandpaper.

 

Karin

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a)The textile paint works well, I use something similar.

 

B) Another possibility is latex based houshold paint. Should bond quite well

 

c) acrrylic paint with a few drops of nail polish is another fine way.

 

I guess all 3 methods were around in '77 :)

 

And you can always weather the edges around the wrist yourself with some sandpaper.

 

Karin

 

Thanks, Karin. Good tips. I think my wife has got a load of acrylic paint ... and some nail polish! :D

 

I'll try the textile paitn first and see how I go.

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if you make the handplates out of raw latex and then paint them, they will chip.

 

but if you mix hobby acrylic white INTO the latex at the time you're pouring into the mould

 

then the paint is completely bonded to the surface.

 

you can apply latex mixed with acrylic paint on top, and they will not chip

 

because the latex bonds to the surface.

 

rubber-mold.jpg

 

the mould builder latex has ammonia in it, and the acrylic paint chemically bonds

to the latex.

 

----

 

if you think using "latex" house paint will work... it does not bond to the latex.

these are different kinds of chemical setups, so you have to mix the right

two kinds together to get it right.

 

the latex handplates are not glossy either, so the perfect solution is to

mix acrylic model paint from hobby lobby, or jo ann's into mould builder latex.

 

you can then lightly paint with a wide brush.

 

making them yourself, allows you to paint them to match, with

the right mixture of white, and blue, or white and yellow to

match the armor.

 

in the screen used latex sets, they didn't match the armor color, just like the

helmets.

 

in the photos above you can see that I've poured/brushed on a thin 3 coats of paint/latex mixture

into my own ABS handplates as a mould. then brushed on, filled in with raw latex on the bottom.

 

I could have painted the bottom with latex, and it NEVER CHIPS!

 

best way is to mix the color AS you MOULD them!

Edited by gmrhodes13
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I just finished these:

 

----

 

 

Latex textile paint with authentic weathering

 

+ paint chiped on the edges (using finger nails)

+ paint cracks

+smudges (graphite poweder from a pencil)

+brush strokes

+repainted areas

 

What do you say?

Edited by gmrhodes13
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