Teresam
New Member- Also, not a professional
Thanks!!That is not the product I referenced, UV Aquathane water based would be the product, yes it dries to a pretty hard finish unless you put it on to thick.
Thanks!!That is not the product I referenced, UV Aquathane water based would be the product, yes it dries to a pretty hard finish unless you put it on to thick.
Best bet is to go to sherwin williams or another paint supplier and see what each product recommends. Aside from that, it's trial and error. They say you cant spray urethane over alkyd but I have never had an issue putting urethane clear over anything, including rust oleum. You might grab a gallon kit from an automotive supplier and see how it goes. Frog juice is something that gets mentioned here as a clear laminate but I have never used it. I am sure that you could use that over top of about anything. I wouldn't go layering on the clears, pick one and run with it. Home Depot isnt the best place for that stuff. I sprayed pre-cat lacquer from SW over cherry veneer and trim and it looked good. 1 coat, dry, light sand and then 2 more coats. Cabinet guys use that.Does anyone know if you could simply use outdoor acrylic paints and then give a coat of spar urethane for uv protection...then a light coat of clear coat enamel? Basically my problem is im very precise with color matching. For instance, I made a Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown and I was unsuccessful with custom mixing his skin color perfectly. I did eventually however, after a long time find the perfect color, but in acrylic paint.
I guess what im asking is because of the wider range of color selection I get with acrylic paint rather than enamel..could I just use acrylic paint, cover the sign with a coating of spar urethane for UV protection and then an enamel coating for a nice hard barrier to protect the paint/urethane?
I've read enamel can be applied over spar urethane but want to make sure.
By thin wafer, I mean a strip of 3/4 plywood. A plywood sign does not need a 4x4 on the back to keep it from warping. Two strips of 3/4" plywood attached to the rear and "glued and screwed" perpendicular to the surface, perhaps 1.5"x22"x3/4" each would keep the face of the sign straight.Yeah, all true, but in this case we are talking 1/2"-3/4" plywood, so a thin wafer does not have enough 'umph' to overcome plywood warp that OP is concerned with. Honestly they could likely use a 2x4 with a spiked end to both act as a stake and stringer. Thin wafer of wood as you put it is hard to imagine, and while yes, you could rip a piece of the face material, rotate it 90 degrees and fasten it to prevent some warp, it'll likely succumb to the greater area of the face board pretty quickly.
Wouldn't plywood layers just warp together? If you want a stiffener, I'd use something besides wood and if not available, at least use solid wood.By thin wafer, I mean a strip of 3/4 plywood. A plywood sign does not need a 4x4 on the back to keep it from warping. Two strips of 3/4" plywood attached to the rear and "glued and screwed" perpendicular to the surface, perhaps 1.5"x22"x3/4" each would keep the face of the sign straight.
Joe
She's using acrylics. It's artsy fartsy shlt, not house painting and it needs a clear.5. Do not bother with clear coats. They'll yellow and fail well before a good exterior grade paint.
Cute girl? I just said my wife, I meant my friend.What I miss today? Some cute mom here asking a few questions and yall try to run her off? Looks like she has interest and more talent than half the people on here, at least she's trying. If I had a list of people to run off, this lady wouldn't be anywhere near the top.
RIGHT! Unless you are planning to have your yard art found by archeologists in the 25th CENTURY, just make them look good NOW, and quit worrying about making them last 300 years. The decorations you showed us, Christmas Carolers, Pilgrims, ... I assume pumpkins and goblins, and Easter Bunnies, Leprechauns ? Uncle Sam? , ... These things are only going to BE out in your yard on a seasonal basis. A few days, or a few weeks per year. It isn't as if they need to withstand Hurricane Katrina! If they weather a bit well ... that adds to their charm!Go to home depot buy a sheet of pvc, a jigsaw, paint brush and their best outdoor latex for the pcv.
No. Plywood bends in one direction, but I have yet to see someone bend a sheet of plywood SIDEWAYS.Wouldn't plywood layers just warp together? If you want a stiffener, I'd use something besides wood and if not available, at least use solid wood.
1. Gino is correct. This is a forum for professionals. Not hobbyists.
Some of us could.She is a professional MOTHER and I seriously doubt that any of us could even approach her level of expertise in that field.
Joe
you must not be very familiar with wet plywood. I didn't say to use marine plywood either, simple exterior grade is fine. The wood is all the same, 1 adhesive is water resistant (exterior) and the other in not (interior)No. Plywood bends in one direction, but I have yet to see someone bend a sheet of plywood SIDEWAYS.
Joe
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