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acrylic over time will lose its gloss, 1/4" thick and up will hold its own as far as longevity vs 1/8" thick which you have no business using anyway. if you could paint the letter with latex I think it would hold out better than the factory finish. some are painted with mathews and after a...
lol sweet mother of God how I love anything from the govt trying to explain something.
IMO there is no set way to absolutely nail a proper distance vs height vs thickness vs color. These days the best thing we have is digital. We can take a pic and super impose the lettering height and color on...
I would quote them on 3/16" thick and then 1/2" thick, a 10" tall letter can be made out of foam, pvc or acrylic. There is nothing wrong with using any of these products.
12ft to 15ft up in the air needs at LEAST 1/2" thick material to even look decent. 3/16 would look cheap and cheesy
sounds like one of "those" people that call and the only option you have is to get rid of them and pawn them off to the internet where they can continue to live their signage fantasy. I sear some people smoke a big ole joint and then ask for the most "off the wall" BS Ive ever heard
Back several years ago there was a sign co in TN that carried lots of changeable letterings. I lost the info and now my only hopes are gemini, I dont care to deal with them. Does anyone know of them its like they were in a small town
A good flat paint is also good for priming instead of using a so called primer. I sure wish you wouldnt use One Shot crappy paint on top of it thought but thats neither here nor there
In in central alabama so I know exactly what your talking about. and sometimes I think about all that steel that could be recycled. It would cost you an a$$load to have these things removed and Im afraid recycling wouldnt cover that cost. It is an eyesore and they are everywhere in our city...
call a local sign company to install this for you.
We have no idea whats behind the facade your installing to. You would actually need to go up behind the facade and see whats going on. You could use deck screws, lag bolts we have no idea of the building
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