SignosaurusRex
Active Member
Me. I worked for a guy that showed me how to speed up my work by using paper cups, mixing the paint in them and using the in side of the cup as my palette. Works great when you have a lot of lettering to knock out, and I knew several others who used the same technique. Of course a index card cup and pallette was still nice for small work.
I was also taught the hand over hand technique and seldom used a mahl stick. Then again I also used a lot of fine line tape if it speeded up the job.
For many years, I paletted my paint on a piece of cardstock and thinned as needed with turps just as I had been taught. I had been doing it that way for about 12 years when I went to work for a real master. His work was amazing and he was incredibly fast. The first two things he made me change about my habits was to learn to use a mahl stick and to work with my paint premixed to the right consistency in a dixie cup held in my mahl stick hand...along with the mahl stick... while working. I have to say that after a bit of struggle and practice working that way, my speed doubled and the quality of my work improved.
Let me ask any of you one question.
When you poured some paint into a dixie cup and added some turps or other additives..... when you were finished with the job.... what did you do with the left over paint in the dixie cup ??
After a while, one can pretty much estimate how much paint is needed without wasting. For myself, If there is any left in the cup, it goes right back into the can. It is so little and modified so minutely that It ain't gonna effect the can one bit and that can isn't gonna sit around long before it's empty.
Yes, the guy in the video displays some poor habits and if not corrected, only handicaps his true potential. The cream always rises to the top...the rest is just fat-free milk. The fat is where the $$ is at.
His website says that he is a third generation sign painter. I'd guess that his dad could paint circles around the lad and for whatever reason, Dusty may have never received much training. Who knows.
I won't knock him...he's working at it. He certainly did not get there over night.
Arlo needs to make some videos!