You should put some sort of stencil on the car and spray water on it or whatever you spray. Make images out of the corrosion.
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Never washing it AGAIN.
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Badass, i love it. Don't make me wiki patina now.
SILBER COMBAT UNIT DELTA (M-Technic Marshal)
RTFM:http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=56950
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Wow, thanks for all the positive comments everyone. Did NOT expect that from r3v.
I think it's been mentioned, but patina is a term describing oxidation of a given metal. Webster's defines it as "a usually green film formed naturally on copper and bronze by long exposure or artificially (as by acids) and often valued aesthetically for its color." But nowadays the HoodRide kids use the term for the combination of worn paint and naturally occurring rust.
Euro bumps are kind of pricey, from what I've seen anyways, and I'm not sure how into them I am. I won't lie though, if I could find a set cheap, I'd probably pick them up. So if anyone has a line on some, let me know.
The finish is actually a paint with finely ground copper in it. When I finished, it looked a lot like a satin-finish version of the coppery-orange color you can get on a lot of newer cars... leaving it that way would have looked a little halfass, but then again that wasn't ever an option in my mind. I didn't buy a commercial patina creating solution because I've done some work with copper before and knew that I could get close with a homebrew solution. Pretty neat too, when it hits the surface, it becomes shiny like a new penny(not for long though). I'm still getting a handle on how this stuff weathers. On its own, it won't go green for a long, long time, but what has gone green does wash away bit by bit, and that bright orangey color has dimmed substantially in the last week. It's moving towards a true copper brown. This weekend I'm redoing the roof, getting it as thick as possible... then I'll patina it, and once I get the deep blues and greens I want, I'll clear it some.
By the end of winter I expect the salt to create some interesting patterns.. . .
Erik
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If anyone wants to do the same type of pauint on their car but keep the copper colour all you have to do is get the car laquer coated after the paint. The laquer will protect the copper from the elements keeping the copper colour without patinaing it.
Problem though would be if you get nicked somewhere it would oxidize quick.
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h0lmes
Incredible. I think it would look best with the original copper color and euro bumpers, but thats me. Great work man.
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