There is a member on here who still focuses on this - but I can't remember what his name is right now. I'll see if I can find one of his threads...Is there anyone around still doing this? Anyone near Lake of the Ozarks who'd be willing to do a wall painted sign?
It would be kind of fun to do. I haven't painted anything like this since I started out in signs over 30 years ago. The company I worked for then has been gone over 15 years. I don't own any of the equipment I would need, and I don't have paints and brushes and all the stuff you need for that either.Last one we did we were able to print a transparency on the latex and cut in the lines with a projector. Haven't seen anybody freehand anything of the sort in 25 years or so I reckon... Wanna borrow my projector?
I think the mural is going on a stucco wall outside - and the freezer is on the other side of the wall on the inside...Or a big ole vinyl mural! Something outdoors I'd pounce before trying a projector, too many variables, plus unless this is in the middle of nowhere, light pollution would overpower the projector. I don't know that I'd put paint on a cooler, or rather what sort of paint would work well on it. I'd avoid penetrating a cooler too, no matter what you're likely to reduce the efficiency with a piece of metal conducting between inside and outside, and I don't think those things are cheap...
The owner thought the wall was stucco. But when I got up there to measure it, it's clearly thin stamped metal with a pebble grain, and it is "smooshy" when you push on it. It's not stucco like the rest of the building. I don't want to mess up the fridge/freezer or do anything that could be remotely associated with any kind of problem it develops.I think the mural is going on a stucco wall outside - and the freezer is on the other side of the wall on the inside...
I don't think I want to be heating and rolling a 12'x60' restaurant name into that textured aluminum.Well if you go the vinyl route, test adhesion strength before you find out that paint is one Ian away from blowing off...
If it's "smooshy" it might have a spray on urethane barrier applied. Some companies do that when they install commercial coolers, adds a little insulation value, and seals everything. If it is, depending on the product, vinyl and paints might not stick well to it, so test whatever you're going to do first.The owner thought the wall was stucco. But when I got up there to measure it, it's clearly thin stamped metal with a pebble grain, and it is "smooshy" when you push on it. It's not stucco like the rest of the building. I don't want to mess up the fridge/freezer or do anything that could be remotely associated with any kind of problem it develops.
It's not coated. What I meant was it's not rigid, and you can easily push it in and out. It feels like thin steel or aluminum. Smooshy like the side of an old mobile home.If it's "smooshy" it might have a spray on urethane barrier applied. Some companies do that when they install commercial coolers, adds a little insulation value, and seals everything. If it is, depending on the product, vinyl and paints might not stick well to it, so test whatever you're going to do first.
Craig Sjoquist, Lives in Fairvilla FL, actually, originally from Minnesota, hence the Scandinavian name. I've worked on a couple walls with him. Competent, old school.His name was Craig Solquest or something like that from Orlando and rode a bike.
That might be quite the event down here at the lake.Hey signbrad, I saw Jill Beans on a hot day painting, you guys must have been in the shade. UncleBun would like to work with her on his mural.
i can loan you a projectorIt would be kind of fun to do. I haven't painted anything like this since I started out in signs over 30 years ago. The company I worked for then has been gone over 15 years. I don't own any of the equipment I would need, and I don't have paints and brushes and all the stuff you need for that either.
The job is for a restaurant that we do the signs for. They built a new Hobby Lobby on the vacant land behind it and he wants the name of the restaurant on the back of the building huge. Problem is the back of the restaurant isn't EFIS stucco like the rest of the building. It's the outside of a giant walk in cooler and freezer along the back of the building. I was considering putting one of the banner frames on it or just mounting a billboard on the back of the building until I found that. I'm not so excited about drilling holes into the side of a refrigerator.