So in my ongoing quest to find new things to monkey around with on Betsy, I decided her badges need a little attention. I have an XS Eleven badge with one of the posts broken off, so I thought it would be a good one to practice on. One shot and I nailed it on the first try. Here's the story.
First, here's the condition of the badge after sanding off all the old gold, and scrubbing and degreasing with Simple Green:
Next I spray painted the whole thing with Rust-oleum Universal Satin All-Surface Paint (plastic is listed specifically on the can as a surface that this material is compatible with):
I let it dry for 24 hours, and using a small foam brush applied Liquid Leaf Renaissance Gold (available for $5.99 at Ace Hardware) to the raised portions of the letters. You want to be careful not to get too much paint on the foam, or it will drip down between the letters. This is after one coat of Liquid Leaf:
Note that this is only one coat of Liquid Leaf. A second coat is in order, but I was so pleased with the results from the foam brush that I had to post. You could probably get it to cover in one coat, but as this was only a test piece I didn't worry too much about minor imperfections. It is as, after all, a proof-of-concept, but I will put a second coat of Liquid Leaf and finish with a clear coat to seal it before I try any of my 'good' pieces. Total time expended so far was about 20 minutes. Materials cost less than $20 (Simple Green, Rust-oleum, Liquid Leaf, Xylene to clean-up the Liquid Leaf, and a small foam brush).
First, here's the condition of the badge after sanding off all the old gold, and scrubbing and degreasing with Simple Green:
Next I spray painted the whole thing with Rust-oleum Universal Satin All-Surface Paint (plastic is listed specifically on the can as a surface that this material is compatible with):
I let it dry for 24 hours, and using a small foam brush applied Liquid Leaf Renaissance Gold (available for $5.99 at Ace Hardware) to the raised portions of the letters. You want to be careful not to get too much paint on the foam, or it will drip down between the letters. This is after one coat of Liquid Leaf:
Note that this is only one coat of Liquid Leaf. A second coat is in order, but I was so pleased with the results from the foam brush that I had to post. You could probably get it to cover in one coat, but as this was only a test piece I didn't worry too much about minor imperfections. It is as, after all, a proof-of-concept, but I will put a second coat of Liquid Leaf and finish with a clear coat to seal it before I try any of my 'good' pieces. Total time expended so far was about 20 minutes. Materials cost less than $20 (Simple Green, Rust-oleum, Liquid Leaf, Xylene to clean-up the Liquid Leaf, and a small foam brush).
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