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Maiden69

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Posts posted by Maiden69

  1. Nice, one comment on the sanding sealer and DEFT paint. That is what I used on my first few guitars, and they where as good (finish wise) as the guitars that I have done with Behlen nitro. With that said, all the guitars that I finished with DEFT got damaged on storage. Somehow, either the heat or the actual finish is not as strong as the Behlen nitro. They got marred from the fabric on the cases, especially in the front area where the small squares of foam are that pushes the body so it won't shift around during transportation. Right now I'm waiting to finish the move, to take them all out and strip them for re-finish. This time, in 2k paint. No more nitro for me.

  2. They both turned out great.

    I get what you say about the window between alcohol and water. If I'm blending, I would only use water on all colors. The reason I use the alcohol dye is so they won't blend at all. You could achieve the same you did by cheating a little bit. Stain dark with the alcohol, then as you sand back, go over the entire face and remove just enough so that the figure starts to show, then carefully sand only on the figure, you got to be very careful, because if you get to overzealous you can create dips that will show on your finish product. I did that on that bass, I noticed that the cherry was being sanded out too easily, so once I had the grain the size I wanted, I switched to a small piece of rubber and just sanded on the top of the figure, doing all possible to avoid the grain. That is the reason, if you look closely between the other guitars and the bass, that the grain look like sharp skinny veins on top of the figure. The other guitars look more soft and blended than the bass.

  3. It looks good, I'm sure you're disappointed because it is not the shade that you wanted. One more trick that I learned from David Mika was to "wash" the color. He literally adds more color and takes away the excess with a clean wet rag until he achieves the color he wanted. I took that one step further using different types of dyes. I started with a alcohol soluble dye for my deep color, sanded back until just the right amount of figure was showing up, then I washed the main color(s) on top of that, those being water soluble tints. First time I tried I used water for both and the dye in the grain bled into the lighter color on top, but when I used the alcohol first, the dark dye didn't bled at all, allowing me to play with the lighter color until the tone that I wanted was achieved. I did that on my first bass. Cheery alcohol dye, then amber water dye rubbed on top.

    DSC02790.jpg

    DSC02792.jpg

    As you can see the cherry turned to orange, but it didn't stained or bled into the clean areas.

  4. It turned out very good... if you were not going for a deeper color, that first one looks right on for a blue stain. My first stain job was a "black-sand back-blue" that was something like your end result but much darker because of the deeper quilt figure.

    DSC01879.jpg

    And my last blue guitar was the opposite, I stained a darker blue, washed it a little bit, sanded just the tip of the wood and then shot a blue toner coat.

    DSC03347.jpg

    DSC03380.jpg

    Both together... as you can see, I love blue guitars!!!

    DSC03378.jpg

    From both yours, I really like the thick flame on the blue one, it's a shame that the grain washed out on the waist. Kinda the same problem I had with the single cut on the waist at the bass side. The grain disappeared once I was done with the carving.

  5. Funky illusion. It wasn't bright at all:

    outside5.jpg

    Chris

    PS: I still have this guitar. No, I'm not inlaying fish into the body hahahah.

    Not bright at all! What tints did you used for the colors? That blue is something I may try to attain in a future build.

    You're going to nail them on instead? I thought you were far more a craftsman than that, Chris.

    He could airbrush them.... :D

  6. I should mention those are our local prices, the same stuff is probably quarter to half the price in USA

    I was going to have a heart attack! I have been buying 2K paint for a while and I can get a quart of decent clear for around $50 including the activator and reducer, and very good clear for maybe double that.

    Guitar is coming out great as always!

  7. I know what you mean, between the car, the guitars, the gym and the family I barely got time to get any more hobbies. I used to draw, and was good, but that was a long time ago. I thought about tattooing, since a good friend has been doing that for 20 yrs now, but it is too much for me to do, so at least airbrushing is the next best choice. And I can incorporate that into the guitars and the cars, and may be the family.

  8. Not really, more like the camo, just that the base color will be also added in the swirls, the rear would be taped or I will just sit the body face down and then paint the rear and fade it down on the sides.

    Now I want to buy a decent airbrush also, I only have a set that was made by Testor back in the days that I used to paint my model cars with. I want to give it a try to see how good can I do.

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