ol' chebby
Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2007
- Messages
- 3,167
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- Location
- Charlotte,NC
- Website
- www.rpettycustommurals.com
An easy way to paint the stripe yourself is to use stencil tape. This has spaces to paint between, then is removed...
Start by wiping twice with a good wax and grease remover, then follow twice with windex. You should be able to hear a squeek when you rub your finger over it. The stripe is supposed to be 2/3 of the way down the belt line, not centered. It should pass through the wiper bezels. It should be 1/8" thick...the top line in this stencil. Order the pinstripe pamphlet for reference.
Peel the backing as you go, leave the clear on for now. This is what the tape looks like...
After aplying the stencil (I lined up the bottom with the bottom groove in the belt line) peel the clear backing, and go ahead and pull the bottom line, it isn't used. Take a razor blade and cut between all the door gaps, so you can pull sections as you are finished with them.
Get a mack striper, this one is a 0. Should be around $10. Get 1/4 pints of 1 shot in the color you need, should be around $7. Juniper green gets a cream stripe. My cream was dried out....I use it so much...HA! So I mixed a little tan with polar white to get the color. Dip your striper in the paint and pallet on a slick magazine. I am using a Speedway catalog right now, but any slick page works. drag your brush back and forth through the paint to load it....
You can thin the 1 shot with mineral spirits, not too much, to get the paint to flow easier. Look on pinheadlounge.com for beginner tips on palleting, consistency tips, etc.
Now take the brush and fill in between the lines. Start about 1/4" from the wiper bezels, leave a rounded tip to the line to look more freehand. fill a section at time, then peel the tape immediately so the paint can "lay down" on the edges and not be sharp, like a stencil...
painted....
peeled....
Start each panel (doors, back, cowl) with a rounded edge, do not let the stripe go around the corner into the jamb, it will bleed under the tape, and a real striper would start and stop on the flat part of the panel anyway.
You have now striped your truck!
Mark another off the list....
Start by wiping twice with a good wax and grease remover, then follow twice with windex. You should be able to hear a squeek when you rub your finger over it. The stripe is supposed to be 2/3 of the way down the belt line, not centered. It should pass through the wiper bezels. It should be 1/8" thick...the top line in this stencil. Order the pinstripe pamphlet for reference.
Peel the backing as you go, leave the clear on for now. This is what the tape looks like...
After aplying the stencil (I lined up the bottom with the bottom groove in the belt line) peel the clear backing, and go ahead and pull the bottom line, it isn't used. Take a razor blade and cut between all the door gaps, so you can pull sections as you are finished with them.
Get a mack striper, this one is a 0. Should be around $10. Get 1/4 pints of 1 shot in the color you need, should be around $7. Juniper green gets a cream stripe. My cream was dried out....I use it so much...HA! So I mixed a little tan with polar white to get the color. Dip your striper in the paint and pallet on a slick magazine. I am using a Speedway catalog right now, but any slick page works. drag your brush back and forth through the paint to load it....
You can thin the 1 shot with mineral spirits, not too much, to get the paint to flow easier. Look on pinheadlounge.com for beginner tips on palleting, consistency tips, etc.
Now take the brush and fill in between the lines. Start about 1/4" from the wiper bezels, leave a rounded tip to the line to look more freehand. fill a section at time, then peel the tape immediately so the paint can "lay down" on the edges and not be sharp, like a stencil...
painted....
peeled....
Start each panel (doors, back, cowl) with a rounded edge, do not let the stripe go around the corner into the jamb, it will bleed under the tape, and a real striper would start and stop on the flat part of the panel anyway.
You have now striped your truck!
Mark another off the list....