Continuing on.
Ah, morning time and I've got the paints I need but I guess I'm out of flat black.
... and you can't build a hot rod without flat black paint.
Off to Home depot I go for just one can. Coffee in hand, I wander around the store a bit thinking of what to use for the police light on this thing but it's clear that I'll be making my own in this case. There's nothing small enough to work just right and it has to have a vintage look to it. Pretty sure a bullet light from a harley or something will do the trick.
It's cold outside and paint doesn't dry well at all in 20 degrees, so I cleaned the body a bit, sat it and the flat black in front of the heater vent and let them warm up.
After warm, I rush outside, shoot the thing, and back in we go. I didn't shoot the entire hood, just around the edges... because that's gonna be white.
With that drying in front of the heater in a utility room, I get to the "bitter work" of making the stencils. They don't sell stencils the size I need nor is it the right font... so I made my own. Just do it on the computer, print it, size it up, then print the right one... then sit... and cut them out, very carefully. Just like the rest of them.
The beauty of this is the stencils will "stencil" perfectly as the body is metal. A bunch of little magnets should keep it in place when I do it and have no overspray.
After the meticulous cutting of the stencils, the paint is dry enough to mask off the front grille.
Once again, warm it all up, run outside on my porch and shoot it... then back in to dry. The spray paint I used on the grill is Valspar, brilliant silver (that metallic stuff) and I gotta tell ya, that stuff is shiny... and dries in like 5 minutes.
There's where I am now.
Back to stencil cutting. Time to make the star then prep the stencils for use.
Happy Saturday.
Kelly