signsolutions
New Member
Good afternoon All,
I have a client who brought an antique wood sign with gold-painted v-routed lettering. The gold looks nice and old. We have been challenged with repainting the REST of the sign to spruce it up, leaving the routed, gold lettering alone.
We rolled the sign lightly with paint, but it was not a smooth finish like we desired. So, on a test piece, I tried the idea of rubber cementing the grooved areas, sanding the entire sign a bit to clean up the surface, and spraying the sign. The filled letters don't peel up as easily as I had imagined, but it does peel up in very small pieces, leaving the gold in it's original condition. I see this taking a few hours to peel up, by the way.
Before I try this on the actual sign, I'm wondering if anyone else has had to do something like this? And is there a quicker way?
Thanks!
- Keith
Sign Solutions
I have a client who brought an antique wood sign with gold-painted v-routed lettering. The gold looks nice and old. We have been challenged with repainting the REST of the sign to spruce it up, leaving the routed, gold lettering alone.
We rolled the sign lightly with paint, but it was not a smooth finish like we desired. So, on a test piece, I tried the idea of rubber cementing the grooved areas, sanding the entire sign a bit to clean up the surface, and spraying the sign. The filled letters don't peel up as easily as I had imagined, but it does peel up in very small pieces, leaving the gold in it's original condition. I see this taking a few hours to peel up, by the way.
Before I try this on the actual sign, I'm wondering if anyone else has had to do something like this? And is there a quicker way?
Thanks!
- Keith
Sign Solutions