Idea Design
New Member
I had a guy call me and ask for some paint mask to be cut for an airbrush design he was doing on a bike tank some time back. I cut the mask and he painted and everyone was tickled pink.
The a friend of mine who is an automotive painter called wondering the same thing. Could I cut some paint mask for him to use in an intricate design he was doing. I said sure can, then I cut everything and sent it off to him.
Fast forward through the weekend and he calls me to ask if there was a mix-up in the vinyl I used to cut his masks. I told him they were all cut from the same roll (20" spray mask from SW) and he told me a story about paint reducer not being able to get along with the paint mask.
He had sprayed a candy coat that was fully cured, applied the first mask, painted, then applied the second mask, and applied a full "wet coat" and after about 20 or 30 seconds, it's like a horrid chemical reaction occurred and the vinyl began to wrinkle and shrink right there under the paint.
Do any of you painter guys know what may have happened here? He pulled some of the weeded material out of the can and put it on the floor and simply poured some reducer on it. Again, 20 or 30 seconds later, it shriveled up like it was being held above a fire.
Is there anything I can offer up as a solution to this problem? It seems as if only the "wet coat" as he referred, is what's causing this. He believes that if he does more of a dry coat, the problem doesn't show itself. I know nothing of automotive paint, so I'm swinging blind. It makes me nervous to possess a roll of "spray mask" that may very well ruin a high dollar paint project.
Thanks, I know there's a couple of dedicated painters out there and I'm counting on you.
The a friend of mine who is an automotive painter called wondering the same thing. Could I cut some paint mask for him to use in an intricate design he was doing. I said sure can, then I cut everything and sent it off to him.
Fast forward through the weekend and he calls me to ask if there was a mix-up in the vinyl I used to cut his masks. I told him they were all cut from the same roll (20" spray mask from SW) and he told me a story about paint reducer not being able to get along with the paint mask.
He had sprayed a candy coat that was fully cured, applied the first mask, painted, then applied the second mask, and applied a full "wet coat" and after about 20 or 30 seconds, it's like a horrid chemical reaction occurred and the vinyl began to wrinkle and shrink right there under the paint.
Do any of you painter guys know what may have happened here? He pulled some of the weeded material out of the can and put it on the floor and simply poured some reducer on it. Again, 20 or 30 seconds later, it shriveled up like it was being held above a fire.
Is there anything I can offer up as a solution to this problem? It seems as if only the "wet coat" as he referred, is what's causing this. He believes that if he does more of a dry coat, the problem doesn't show itself. I know nothing of automotive paint, so I'm swinging blind. It makes me nervous to possess a roll of "spray mask" that may very well ruin a high dollar paint project.
Thanks, I know there's a couple of dedicated painters out there and I'm counting on you.