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Fun with chisels!

SignManiac

New Member
So I'm working on a large blast carved cedar sign featuring an orange pictorial on it and thought it would be therapeutic to get out the chisels and have at it. Next I'll paint it the colors shown in the print out above it. Sometimes it's nice to get away from the computer for a little while!
 

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SignManiac

New Member
Blasted the sign yesterday so here it is in it's raw state before getting finish sanded, primed and painted. This sign is 5'h. x 8'w. I decided to do the little scroll pieces with a prismatic bevel.

This should be completed by the end of next week. I'll post a finish shot of it then with the color on it.
 

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J Hill Designs

New Member
hmm I have no problem with that - 2 coats thinned spar varnish, final coat unthinned spar varnish, 1 shot, blast, paint background, remove
 

SignManiac

New Member
I would never put 1-shot on any of my sign work ever again. Two years down here and it turns to chalk. I'm all latex based on my work and it holds it color very well.
 

SignManiac

New Member
Yep your boss is still doing stuff the old school way. Times have changed and so have the materials we have to work with. I'm always looking for new and better ways of doing things. What I do today doesn't resemble anything I did thirty years ago. And I for one am glad things have changed for the better!
 

SignManiac

New Member
Pat the oranges are carved from some scrap 15lb. HDU. I used some scrap 3/4" PVC for the prismatic scroll pieces. The paint is Behr premium exterior semi gloss house paint usually two coats on top of Zinsser oil base primer on cedar. Oil base because the tannins in the cedar can leech out. On anything else I would use a water base primer. That's about all there is to it..
 

SignManiac

New Member
Updated:

Here she is painted. I won't be installing this one, the client is. I'm satisfied with the way it turned out.
 

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RJ California

New Member
Those oranges are masterworks as far as signs go. Great for closeup photos for a portfolio piece. I appreciate your input on latex too. We always use latex on the blasted backgrounds but usually One-Shot on the lettering. What brand of latex paint do you prefer? How many coats on the lettering?
 

SignManiac

New Member
RJ I've been using Behr premium for the past several years. Occasionally Sherwin Williams or Glidden. I figure if they hold up on the outside of your house for many years, they should last just as long on a sign. In Florida seven to ten years has been the average before they need a repaint. I always go with two coats of primer and at least two coats on the finish. Sometimes three if it's a dark color.
 

RJ California

New Member
RJ I've been using Behr premium for the past several years. Occasionally Sherwin Williams or Glidden. I figure if they hold up on the outside of your house for many years, they should last just as long on a sign. In Florida seven to ten years has been the average before they need a repaint. I always go with two coats of primer and at least two coats on the finish. Sometimes three if it's a dark color.
Great -- I use Behr also for backgrounds. Thanks for the information.:thankyou:
 
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