DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Woodworking (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/)
-   -   how to do a metallic finish? (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/79231-how-do-metallic-finish.html)

Ah10201 November 29th 04 06:33 PM

how to do a metallic finish?
 
does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal? is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...

mp November 29th 04 06:59 PM

does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal?
is
there a paint of special finish or something?


For small pieces you can use armor coat metallic paint spray bombs. I don't
know if it comes in cans.



Mike Marlow November 29th 04 07:29 PM


"Ah10201" wrote in message
...
does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal?

is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...


I've never tried to do it with MDF, but getting a metallic finish should be
quite straight forward, assuming you have some spray skills. Just buy the
paint you want - either in spray cans or in liquid quantities for mixing in
a spray gun. Get a primer that is compatible with the finish paint. Seal
the MDF with a good sealer, prime it, sand it flat and spray your choice of
metallic paint on it. What you end up with for a finish will be dependent
upon your spray technique. Do a google search and you'll find a few
discussions on this in this newsgroup. There's really no reason MDF should
not paint up like any metal, assuming proper preparation first.

--

-Mike-




Bruce November 29th 04 08:56 PM

For plastic model kits I used some stuff in a small tube (from arts & crafts
store, can't remember the name/brand) that you would rub on and buff it to a
"perfect" chrome or gold finish. It would work great on small stuff but
probably too expensive to do more than a few sq. ft.

-Bruce

On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 11:33:52 -0700, Ah10201 wrote
(in article ):

does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal? is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...




Andy Dingley November 29th 04 09:12 PM

On 29 Nov 2004 18:33:52 GMT, (Ah10201) wrote:

does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal?


The blades on these
http://codesmiths.com/shed/things/knives/wasters/
are beech, given a coat of silver wax (try a craft / hobby shop). It
works on MDF too.


makesawdust November 30th 04 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ah10201
does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal? is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...


You can veneer heavy duty aluminum foil to MDF using spray adhesive. Buy the heaviest foil you can find, and spray both the foil and the substrate with the adhesive. Let the glue get tacky, then carefully affix the foil to the MDF. You'll only get one shot at this!

For a brushed-aluminum finish, lightly hand sand with 220 grit paper in circular motions. You'll need to protect the fragile aluminum with some type of finish coat like polyacrylic, or polyurathane.

I've built a number of clocks using this technique (including a floor clock that was 5 feet tall) and they turned out great.

Good luck!

kdz.96 November 30th 04 07:54 PM

Formica has a metal laminate that you can order from any home supply depot.
It is used for this purpose.

Ken



does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal?

is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...




tclapp November 30th 04 10:24 PM

Good seal with enamel undercoat. Then try automotive enamel with metallic
flakes. If project is small even metallic model airplane metallic paint
does a good job.

"makesawdust" wrote in message
...

Ah10201 Wrote:
does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal?
is
there a paint of special finish or something?

thanks...



You can veneer heavy duty aluminum foil to MDF using spray adhesive.
Buy the heaviest foil you can find, and spray both the foil and the
substrate with the adhesive. Let the glue get tacky, then carefully
affix the foil to the MDF. You'll only get one shot at this!

For a brushed-aluminum finish, lightly hand sand with 220 grit paper in
circular motions. You'll need to protect the fragile aluminum with some
type of finish coat like polyacrylic, or polyurathane.

I've built a number of clocks using this technique (including a floor
clock that was 5 feet tall) and they turned out great.

Good luck!


--
makesawdust




J T November 30th 04 11:23 PM

Tue, Nov 30, 2004, 4:49pm (EST+5)
(makesawdust) says:
You can veneer heavy duty aluminum foil to MDF using spray adhesive.
snip

Once knew a guy who did that to an Olds Cutlass. Wanted to
"antique" it. The foil came out crinkled over every square inch. But,
even it it had been flat, it still would have made a decent looking car
look like crap.

Me, if I wanted wood to look metallic, I'd do it the standard way.
Sprayed on automotive paint.



JOAT
Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind dont
matter, and those who matter dont mind.
- Dr Seuss


sandman December 5th 04 01:48 AM

In article ge4rd.123727$5K2.95917@attbi_s03,
"kdz.96" wrote:

Formica has a metal laminate that you can order from any home supply depot.
It is used for this purpose.

Ken


As does Wilsonart. Big dollars though and the edges are hard to file.
There are two types that I use. One is solid metal, the other is a thin
layer of metal on a phenolic back, like regular HPlam. The HPlam version
doesn't telegraph substrate irregularities as badly as the solid metals.


Rob

Andrew Barss December 5th 04 02:11 AM

Ah10201 wrote:
: does anyone have a tried finish to make MDF and plywood look like metal? is
: there a paint of special finish or something?


Try Hammerite spray paint, available at most places that sell spray paint.
This gives a slightly textured, two-toned finish that looks exactly like
the coating on heavy duty equipment like oscilloscopes. Good stuff, and
cheap.

-- Andy Barss


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:40 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter