Texas_Signmaker
Very Active Signmaker
I am trying to apply digitally printed 3M ... CUT vinyl to this style of brick... it's like apply to sand. Is it possible? What do I need to do?
I have no idea... It was shipped to me. I used a brush to sand off some of the loose grit.
You might have to seal that brick. The finish might have to much "grit" for the adhesive not being able to stick.
Sometimes the mason will "wash" the mortar, which has sand and binder in it to get that effect.
Try using some TSP in water and clean and let dry an area to help make the vinyl to adhere.
What's TSP?
This wouldnt be so bad if it was CUT vinyl on premask. They said someone did it before by using vinegar and water ... But that doesn't remove the half inch large chuncks of mortar splattered everywhere.
Thanks for the info. I would just slap it on there and heat the hell out of it, but some of the cut vinyl pieces are about the size of a finger. Getting them off the application tape is near impossible. I can get the larger pieces to kinda stick in areas, but the small ones are a no go. Whole decal is like 4' x 10'. I told the company that subbed me out whats going on and they said they need to figure it out and will let me know.
Oh no. They diecut it? Into pieces that small?
WTF? Don't people selling these projects know anything about the materials needed to pull it off?
Good luck my man.
What's TSP?
I am trying to apply digitally printed 3M ... CUT vinyl to this style of brick... it's like apply to sand. Is it possible? What do I need to do?
re: your original question, the answer is no. You cannot apply vinyl to that kind of brick.
Possibly you might get high strength adhesive vinyl in a large sheet to stick and even conform with heat. But it will not last as you'd expect it to on, say, an aluminum panel.
Yes you can. I 3M training you have to apply a graphic to a wall just like that to pass. Brush off the area like and you will need a heat gun that goes to about 900-1000 degree, and a soft foam roller.
Apply the material and than go back over it with the heat gun and foam roller. You should see the material suck into the brick.
Here's a video.
This is where a little professional salesmanship comes in lmao...let them know you want to solve the issue as much as they do and take the opportunity to explain that since the vinyl will never stick and is a lost cause that they should upgrade to a fancy digital billboard or better yet a classy 3D carved sign/display...chances are they won’t want to make the budget for such a thing, so then you offer a really elegantly designed banner (much easier to hang than cut vinyl by the way)...or even one of those quick change banner frames so they could change out the banner affordably every so often...or if needs to conform to a “hipster” taste then you could build out a deep frame (wood or aluminum) and wrap a banner onto it...would give it that borderless look like a canvas painting...