iSign
New Member
fortunately I am a much bigger fan of HDU, but it is pricey, and there are lots of cheaper foam letters on buildings around here, so a few years back, before I got my CNC, I sold a few sets of Gator Foam (Gator Board?) letters.
One of the jobs had a real stylized font, with a heavy slant & the resulting letters were about 20" x 20" with some sharp points, and skinny sections... a somewhat unstable result prone to warping I now see...
I can add pics later, but I'm at home still on my laptop, and wanting to at least get the conversation started. I did one Gator job on my own CNC, using a version of the product that has a white surface on both sides, that has a plastic-y quality... but the job in question was subbed out & produced on a gator product that had a brown kraft paper finish. Both the company that cut the foam, and the employee I had back then reassured me they had used this product outdoors numerous times.
Well, the main reason I was up on the roof looking at this job last week, is because one letter is delaminating at the top, revealing the top 2 inches of white foam, as the surface has begun to peel away & droop down over itself.
Among other things, what I saw up on that roof, is that half a dozen neighbors of this business have cheap foam letters that are holding up just fine. They are all smaller, and lighter in color, and much older... and they are holding up.
Mine are painted red, with rattle can enamel, sprayed in several light coats, to prevent the paint eating the foam (per the suggestion of the employee who did so many similar jobs back in Boston) and then after the red outline & edge color was painted, black vinyl covers 90% of the letter, leaving only the red outline. Also I should note that I used a minimum of double face tape & silicone adhesive, because I thought of the weight of the letter as the only force to contend with.
Well, maybe the dark colors (and resulting heat) are partly why my large letters are failing, and the other letters on the building are not... maybe the choice of paint was wrong? There is also warpage in my large letters, and the corners are pulling away from the building in some cases, so the amount of adhesive could also be a factor...
In any case, it looks like I will have to entirely re-do the job. On new bids, I have been specifying HDU because it is more durable, and I trust it... but I also wonder if I am throwing a way too expensive material at a job that a much cheaper material can be made to work.
I've seen the other "cheap" foam letters that have worked for many years, with much of the edges being eroded away by time, birds, or weather... yet the faces are still intact & the clients still happy... so for future low budget clients, or for my own desire to use a sufficient product, but not an overly pricey product... and for the most affordable solution to a free repair...
...what can anyone teach me about low cost foam letters, painting, mounting, and preventing against warpage or delamination?
One of the jobs had a real stylized font, with a heavy slant & the resulting letters were about 20" x 20" with some sharp points, and skinny sections... a somewhat unstable result prone to warping I now see...
I can add pics later, but I'm at home still on my laptop, and wanting to at least get the conversation started. I did one Gator job on my own CNC, using a version of the product that has a white surface on both sides, that has a plastic-y quality... but the job in question was subbed out & produced on a gator product that had a brown kraft paper finish. Both the company that cut the foam, and the employee I had back then reassured me they had used this product outdoors numerous times.
Well, the main reason I was up on the roof looking at this job last week, is because one letter is delaminating at the top, revealing the top 2 inches of white foam, as the surface has begun to peel away & droop down over itself.
Among other things, what I saw up on that roof, is that half a dozen neighbors of this business have cheap foam letters that are holding up just fine. They are all smaller, and lighter in color, and much older... and they are holding up.
Mine are painted red, with rattle can enamel, sprayed in several light coats, to prevent the paint eating the foam (per the suggestion of the employee who did so many similar jobs back in Boston) and then after the red outline & edge color was painted, black vinyl covers 90% of the letter, leaving only the red outline. Also I should note that I used a minimum of double face tape & silicone adhesive, because I thought of the weight of the letter as the only force to contend with.
Well, maybe the dark colors (and resulting heat) are partly why my large letters are failing, and the other letters on the building are not... maybe the choice of paint was wrong? There is also warpage in my large letters, and the corners are pulling away from the building in some cases, so the amount of adhesive could also be a factor...
In any case, it looks like I will have to entirely re-do the job. On new bids, I have been specifying HDU because it is more durable, and I trust it... but I also wonder if I am throwing a way too expensive material at a job that a much cheaper material can be made to work.
I've seen the other "cheap" foam letters that have worked for many years, with much of the edges being eroded away by time, birds, or weather... yet the faces are still intact & the clients still happy... so for future low budget clients, or for my own desire to use a sufficient product, but not an overly pricey product... and for the most affordable solution to a free repair...
...what can anyone teach me about low cost foam letters, painting, mounting, and preventing against warpage or delamination?