android606
New Member
I know there's a similar thread to this, but I have a little different twist.
I think it would be very, very helpful if someone experienced could give a real step-by-step about this.
I have a customer that needs 10 4x8 sheets of MDO. He wants them base coated a very specific shade of yellow (to match his store), so I bought a gallon of custom tinted Syn-Lustro oil based paint from Dunn-Edwards.
I've only been doing this about 2 years, and up until now, I've never had a sign bigger than a single sheet of MDO. Furthermore, I've never dealt with yellow. It seems that most people either want a relatively dark base color, or they just want to leave it glossy white, the way it comes from my supplier.
Here's my usual procedure to coat MDO, arrived at mainly by trial and error:
1) I get Rust-oleum oil based paint, or 1-Shot lettering paint. If I need a custom color, I get oil based "Syn-Lustro" from my local Dunn-Edwards paint store.
2) I recently started de-glossing the surface with a Scotch-Brite pad.
3) I apply the paint with a 3" natural bristle brush I get from the paint store.
4) Sometimes, I'll thin the paint a bit and apply a second coat.
Usually, that works fine. It doesn't look *perfect*, but it looks pretty darned good, and the customers like it.
I have had the worst time trying make this particular job look good. This yellow is just a nightmare. I've tried brushing it; every brush stroke shows. I tried spraying it with an automotive sprayer; every spray stroke shows, and the paint either runs, or it comes out rough and matte looking. I used a small white foam roller; it looks like it was applied with a sponge.
It has occurred to me that my technique probably sucks, all of my paint jobs are probably full of brush strokes, and the dark color just masks them so you can't tell they're there.
So, what am I doing wrong? Is it my choice of materials? Should I actually be using latex or something? Do I need a different brush, roller, or sprayer? Is yellow just a pain? Am I doing everything wrong? It seems like everywhere the paint overlaps, the yellow is very noticeably darker.
Manufacturers of everything from cars to kids toys seem to be able to put a perfect coat of paint on just about anything, so why is it so hard to get the same results on a specially prepared white piece of MDO?
As I said before, I think step-by-step instructions, with a complete list of tools and materials would be extremely helpful to me, and probably to many others.
Thank you for your time,
Andrew
I think it would be very, very helpful if someone experienced could give a real step-by-step about this.
I have a customer that needs 10 4x8 sheets of MDO. He wants them base coated a very specific shade of yellow (to match his store), so I bought a gallon of custom tinted Syn-Lustro oil based paint from Dunn-Edwards.
I've only been doing this about 2 years, and up until now, I've never had a sign bigger than a single sheet of MDO. Furthermore, I've never dealt with yellow. It seems that most people either want a relatively dark base color, or they just want to leave it glossy white, the way it comes from my supplier.
Here's my usual procedure to coat MDO, arrived at mainly by trial and error:
1) I get Rust-oleum oil based paint, or 1-Shot lettering paint. If I need a custom color, I get oil based "Syn-Lustro" from my local Dunn-Edwards paint store.
2) I recently started de-glossing the surface with a Scotch-Brite pad.
3) I apply the paint with a 3" natural bristle brush I get from the paint store.
4) Sometimes, I'll thin the paint a bit and apply a second coat.
Usually, that works fine. It doesn't look *perfect*, but it looks pretty darned good, and the customers like it.
I have had the worst time trying make this particular job look good. This yellow is just a nightmare. I've tried brushing it; every brush stroke shows. I tried spraying it with an automotive sprayer; every spray stroke shows, and the paint either runs, or it comes out rough and matte looking. I used a small white foam roller; it looks like it was applied with a sponge.
It has occurred to me that my technique probably sucks, all of my paint jobs are probably full of brush strokes, and the dark color just masks them so you can't tell they're there.
So, what am I doing wrong? Is it my choice of materials? Should I actually be using latex or something? Do I need a different brush, roller, or sprayer? Is yellow just a pain? Am I doing everything wrong? It seems like everywhere the paint overlaps, the yellow is very noticeably darker.
Manufacturers of everything from cars to kids toys seem to be able to put a perfect coat of paint on just about anything, so why is it so hard to get the same results on a specially prepared white piece of MDO?
As I said before, I think step-by-step instructions, with a complete list of tools and materials would be extremely helpful to me, and probably to many others.
Thank you for your time,
Andrew