Let it go right here. What are your problems ??
Okay, guess I'll post here.
I am a mural artist/painter by trade and I am currently working on a ceiling project using my 1st cutter to produce stencils to mask a pattern that I then paint onto said ceiling.
My issue is twofold, one being, the stencil material I am using: Oramask 813. I wish I had looked at the specs more carefully, as I didn't read it's for smooth surfaces and I am using it on a ceiling, with multiple layers of plaster, paint, and all the associated bumps and waves that go with that.
Hindsight being 20/20, I would have prepped this ceiling very differently, and used oramask 810, or a variant instead. But that's a situation that I've resolved via TLC. (tedious, lengthy corrections!)
Any other suggestions on a vinyl that can be used with water-based paints, that can go over a slightly bumpy surface?
Project currently looks like this:
Now to the second part: The client wants the grey color you see in the image above darker. meaning, he is unhappy with the current pattern as it appears against the lighter grey. When I pressed him as to why he waited until nearly the entire ceiling was complete to tell me this, he replied that he wanted to see the whole thing before making a decision. I explained that changing the color without re-painting the ceiling would be difficult, and re-painting would be costly, and time-consuming. (here's my lack of experience)
I told him "re-painting the ceiling would get you the look you want, but would basically involve re-cutting ALL the stencils used, and re-weeding, re-taping, re-transferring and re-painting."
He asked how much would that cost? I sighed. As expected, he asked that I give him another option. I gave him two.
1. Leave ceiling as is.
2. I could attempt to use a semi-transparent coating on the ceiling. He would lose the glossiness of the black, but perhaps get the darker shade he was after.
He went for #2. Now, I have experimented with semi-transparent paints before (alcohol based inks,. dyes) but never on a large scale. It's always been on smaller areas of artwork. So, I did two experiments.
On a piece of scrap wood I re-created the same paint and pattern used above and tested two types of coating.
1. Alcohol based ink diluted with 70% isopropyl
the wood grain absorbed some of the ink wash and left some dark streaks, but I was planning to use the technique on a painted ceiling so no big deal.
2. Olympic Wood Stain in a dark black. (I had some laying around and figured, why not try?)
As you can see, the stain was a big fail. Too shiny, and the un-even buildup on the grey is too much.
After showing the client the images above, he liked the ink option, but asked if there was a way to make the color less reddish. Which is why I'm reaching out here. Has anyone ever worked with a semi-transparent coating that can cover a larger area?
Had any success with using diluted inks or dyes to change the color of something after its been painted? I hope I'm not over-reaching asking for help here. This seems very niche and more of a "You dug that hole chief..." question.
But hey! The client is the guy with the shovel in this case!