Thank you Thank you. Man I have been scouring UA-cam for a demo like this. This is exactly the type of dye work i am personally interested in doing. Now icknow who to look for.
Super sick!! Bob Ross would be blown away with those happy little trees...that are on fire lol Makes me wanna do more freehand stuff for sure! Thanks for making this video bud! :)
I had several Bob Ross thoughts too putting this one together as he painted on the disc, I was more thinking sad little trees though. I can feel you on the freehand inspiration as well, filled me right up to the brim with some "want to"!
Very very crazy! I've been doing shaving cream and lotion dyes for about a week now. Having a good time with it, makes me want to buy more discs just to do more.
You and me both Jacob! Good news, we'll be dropping another episode in within the next week...and then another a couple weeks after that. Stay tuned bud!
So what's the mixture he uses? When I've tried painting dye on before it comes out so light that I have to go over it like 10 times to get something that looks good.
The orange and yellow in the jars are Worm Dip, after putting it down he's blending them with some denatured alcohol. The darker stuff he's using is iDye mixed with acetone, also blended with alcohol after it's down. Some plastics are way more receptive to this technique than others. He's using Star plastic here which eats it right up.
Are you thickening up the paints? It looked like the first bit with the flames was just regular old acetone based dye, but when you switched to I-dye poly it was a bit thicker? I wanna start painting Color’s onto stencil dyes and masking, remasking, remasking, remasking is excruciating. If I was basically just colouring within the lines, should I be thickening my dyes to make it more like paint? Or just putting less on the brush so it doesn’t run? Thank ya kindly!
All of the dyes Greg is using in this one are all basically the same consistency. Using less dye on the brush and doing more coats is the answer direct answer to your question. Of course there are other ways to color in the stencil, but with brushwork it can require a little extra patience to get the shade you're looking for while still keeping things clean.
If you want to remove the impression left by the factory stamp: clean the disc very well, wipe the stamp, use MAPP gas torch with a trigger igniter. Put the disc in the fridge for 1 hour. Then blast the disc with the torch from the center to the rim quickly. turn the disck 30 degrees and do it again. keep going until the design is gone. DON'T LET THE DISC GET HOT. This only takes about 15 seconds to do, then put it in a sink of cold water. The other thing this does is make the disc absolutly like glass. Caution. this doesn't work with some rubber based discs. Cheers and play at your own risk - be safe if you try it. Your work is spectacular!
Love this, definitely gonna try it. Thanks so much for the detailed run down Dickie, may be showing this technique off on the channel one day soon. I do though sometimes like the impression of the old stamp that's left behind, gives the disc some history or provenance.
Thank you Thank you. Man I have been scouring UA-cam for a demo like this. This is exactly the type of dye work i am personally interested in doing. Now icknow who to look for.
Greg is a real stud! Glad this one hit the mark for you bud.
@@TheDifferenceisDoingIt Are there any more demos from him?
Wow. This is some next level brush work that I’m not quite at in my art life.
You and me both Chayse... I'm sure it won't stop me from giving it a try now though!
Yah I saw that glorious bad boy disc on Reddit r/discdyeing group. Was totally mind blown by the craftsmanship of the dyeing.
No question it's an incredible disc! So pumped he shared the process with us.
Man alive that guy is super talented!!
Amen to that!
I could watch that all day!
You can me both Bruce, glad you could dig it!
So cool! Thanks for sharing. Keep doin it!
Appreciate you Danny, you're most welcome. Best of luck bud!
That disc looks amazing. Glad to see the TDiDi Army up on display. Keep Doing It y'all. YEA!!!
44
You said bro! The TDIDI Army is coming correct!
Super sick!! Bob Ross would be blown away with those happy little trees...that are on fire lol Makes me wanna do more freehand stuff for sure! Thanks for making this video bud! :)
I had several Bob Ross thoughts too putting this one together as he painted on the disc, I was more thinking sad little trees though. I can feel you on the freehand inspiration as well, filled me right up to the brim with some "want to"!
Skills to pay the bills!!
No kidding right!?!
GREG this is completely balling out of control my man. What an awesome dye job holy carp.
Couldn't have said it better myself Booker, dude is a total stud!
That was so satisfying to watch. Renfro is always posting the coolest painted discs. Love it man!
You said it bro, he's a total stud!
Awesome dye
Beautiful work! Thanks for sharing, I have so much inspiration now!
Word for word how I felt after going through the footage myself...
Very very crazy! I've been doing shaving cream and lotion dyes for about a week now. Having a good time with it, makes me want to buy more discs just to do more.
Ahhh, The Fever! That right there is the eternal conundrum for disc dyers, way more inspiration than plastic.
Holy crap! Thats amazing!
Right?!? My man has some skills!
Daaaayyyymmm .....nice work
Ha! I couldn't help but hear that "Daaayyymmm" in Smokey's voice from Friday.
love this series
You and me both Jacob! Good news, we'll be dropping another episode in within the next week...and then another a couple weeks after that. Stay tuned bud!
Crazy good!!! Thanks for sharing!
My man has some insane skills!
Been wanting to try saurons eye but didn't think I could. Thanks for the inspiration
Failed that dye a few times myself...learned a ton trying it through.
Looked cool spinning
2nd that!
So what's the mixture he uses? When I've tried painting dye on before it comes out so light that I have to go over it like 10 times to get something that looks good.
Might be spike it soft plastic worm dye. I'm not 100% sure cuz I can't find any without garlic scent so I haven't tried any myself.
The orange and yellow in the jars are Worm Dip, after putting it down he's blending them with some denatured alcohol. The darker stuff he's using is iDye mixed with acetone, also blended with alcohol after it's down. Some plastics are way more receptive to this technique than others. He's using Star plastic here which eats it right up.
Kirby, here's a link to where you can get some unscented: www.ispikeit.com/product/150/dip-n-glo-unscented
Is there like a seal coat you had to do or will it stay naturally
No seal or coat needed. These are poly dye that penetrate and bind with the plastic.
Does all that heating mess with the disc flight.
Hasn't caused any problems for me yet.
Really nice. I wonder how it will hold up after smashing a dozen trees or so.
Cuts right through them!
Ha ha! Gimme 3.
What is the worm dye Greg is using?
Worm Dip, it's a fishing lure dye that works great for disc dyeing too. I prefer the Quick Coat Worm Dip over Spike It, but they're both awesome.
@@TheDifferenceisDoingIt awesome thanks!!
Are you thickening up the paints? It looked like the first bit with the flames was just regular old acetone based dye, but when you switched to I-dye poly it was a bit thicker? I wanna start painting Color’s onto stencil dyes and masking, remasking, remasking, remasking is excruciating. If I was basically just colouring within the lines, should I be thickening my dyes to make it more like paint? Or just putting less on the brush so it doesn’t run? Thank ya kindly!
All of the dyes Greg is using in this one are all basically the same consistency. Using less dye on the brush and doing more coats is the answer direct answer to your question. Of course there are other ways to color in the stencil, but with brushwork it can require a little extra patience to get the shade you're looking for while still keeping things clean.
TIDI!!!!!
If you want to remove the impression left by the factory stamp: clean the disc very well, wipe the stamp, use MAPP gas torch with a trigger igniter. Put the disc in the fridge for 1 hour. Then blast the disc with the torch from the center to the rim quickly. turn the disck 30 degrees and do it again. keep going until the design is gone. DON'T LET THE DISC GET HOT. This only takes about 15 seconds to do, then put it in a sink of cold water. The other thing this does is make the disc absolutly like glass. Caution. this doesn't work with some rubber based discs. Cheers and play at your own risk - be safe if you try it. Your work is spectacular!
Love this, definitely gonna try it. Thanks so much for the detailed run down Dickie, may be showing this technique off on the channel one day soon. I do though sometimes like the impression of the old stamp that's left behind, gives the disc some history or provenance.
@@TheDifferenceisDoingIt me too. plus, you know what the disc is a year later! lol
check out Amy Lewis from Hyzerdyes #hyzerdyes
Very familiar with her work, she's a real pro! Fingers crossed she'd like to be on our "Other Basement Disc Dyers" series some day.
Im not strapping on...
Better strap in then...
That's ridiculous!!!
My man has some mad skills!