The key is how I design our routing files with layers and lots of texture.
The texture allows us to paint a base color on with acrylic paints... pretty basic stuff anybody could do. Then we apply a couple (or more) layers of glazing, semi transparent paint which we wipe off (mostly) with a soft rag. This gives our woodgrains and other textures incredible depth and richness. It doesn't take long. We work from light colors to dark. By leaving a dark glaze heavier around the letters it makes them pop out when we paint them a lighter color. We work from the bottom layer of the sign up to the top. The last thing we generally paint is the letters. Because we have raised them from the background (when we designed the routing files) we only have to paint the tops. Because they are raised with a sharp edge it is as simple as dragging a brush around the edges to get a nice crisp outline.
It makes it all easy and fast. And it makes our signs stand out from the crowd.
The sign will be in production about a week but overlapped with other similar projects. And this sign is all we need to do this week to make a good living. I told the customer we needed six weeks to do the project. We will have it done in less than four. This exceeds the customer's expectations and lessens our stress. I would much rather make one or two good paying sign each week than a hundred small things. I have no competition to worry me, and I only do a little paperwork. Less stress - more creativity. It makes sense to me.
The sign took one sheet of Precision Board (plus some scraps), a little glue, less than 1 kit (50 lbs) of of Abracadabra sculpt a bit of steel, two eye bolts, and some paint. Il'' have 20 hours into it in total plus another 15 hours for our part time help. Bec will paint it and she should be able to do it in about 8 hours.
This sign measures 4' x 4' x 4' deep. It is two sided meaning the two bull's heads will be back to back. The sign faces were routed from 2" 30 lb Precision Board. I used scrap pieces of 1.5" 30 lb Precision Board to laminate between them with a 1.5" welded square tubing frame in the middle. The eye bolts are welded to that frame and stick out the top.
The initial design concept took about an hour to do from sketch to finish. The sketch was in my sketchbook which I then imported into PhotoShop and finished with a digital pen on my Wacom tablet.
The file took me less than an hour to design and send to the router. The head of the bull was created as a simple cutout of Precision Board...
Then I started adding the sculpt filling the larger areas with crumpled up heavy duty tinfoil. This was a money/time saving strategy. In the last picture you can see the pPrecision BOard cutouts as well as the crumpled tinfoil. This is a rough sculpt to get the basic shape. A final layer would be done over this.
I hope this answers your questions.
-grampa dan