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Painting straight lines.

Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2016 5:08 pm
by jarndice
Whilst painting "Fin Flashes" on a DHC 2 Beaver I made a mess with a plastic stencil that was too inflexible and allowed the paint to creep underneath ,I couldn't use masking tape as the paint that the "Flash" was going on was too unstable to take it.
THINK ???
!!!
The Heroine who shares my life had been defrosting the freezer and was using the plastic scraper to finish it off,
I found an old one checked the blade was straight and true and used it instead of the stencil. PERFECT,
Ensure the work is firmly located, then place the blade of the scraper at an angle against where the straight line is going and using a trailing brush slowly go for it,
Lift the scraper up and toward the work,( in this case the flash,) when finished.
You will obviously need to measure in advance how far the line goes but the scraper is large enough to take care of most lines and yet small enough to get in to tight spaces and you can always trim it smaller if needed.
shaun.

Re: Painting straight lines.

Posted: Sun Jan 31, 2016 4:21 am
by PainlessWolf
Good evening,
Jarndice, thank you for the great tip! ;o)
regards,
Painless

Re: Painting straight lines.

Posted: Tue Sep 20, 2016 2:26 pm
by Jay-Em
For smaller objects, an old-fashioned razor-blade, the ones you clamp into a razor, also work like a charm. Just remember to dull one side throughly. You'd be amazed how little you feel of the blade sinking into your finger.. *shiver* :{