How to Rust Metal in Minutes!
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- Опубліковано 23 лип 2024
- Check out this really simple way to quickly rust metal (iron) to get an awesome, aged patina. You only need three household ingredients: hydrogen peroxide, regular white vinegar, and salt! It works almost instantly to create an amazing, rich, rust texture.
I forgot to mention in the video, but you can also slightly adjust the amount of vinegar and salt you add to get optimal results ( I suppose weather, humidity, etc may play a role... so just test it out!)
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If you liked this video, give it a thumbs up, and share it with anyone that you think might like to see it too!
My Site: www.diydork.com
Instagram: / mrdiydork
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Later!
- Kevin - Навчання та стиль
its always the videos from almost a decade ago that help me out the most
Yes exactly .😂 Now adays most videos about women without panties showing the world their p@sy and behinds and they call it educational videos .. not sex
This video was the solution to my tin roof 1/35 scale house I'm building. Your mixture worked like a champ. All of my tin roof panels came out looking amazing. Great tip!
Awesome! Glad it worked great for your little house.
I can’t thank you enough for this video. I’m on a fixed income and you saved me $30 on the commercial ruster. ( I feel blessed to have any income at all during the pandemic. Closer to the grave though😹) and $30 is a lot of money!! Stay safe and healthy. 👍&subscribed
I want to thank you for a very well thought out simple video on making rust on metal surfaces, I love the way you took it slow and very simple on what you will need. I am in the process of wanting to make steam punk art made out of steel pipe and they have to be rusty or I wont have the effect I need you answered my question fully thank you again . I hope you read your messages
THANK YOU! Trying to rust up some parts and vinegar was taking forever. This sped the process up considerably.
Curious... Why not just go straight to the solution.. instead of 3 coats viniger?
I did this experiment and documented my results! I am finishing my MFA VFX thesis all about rust and will be citing this video in my bibliography! So thank yOU!
Putting a large sheet of steel with this rust texture on top of a table or counter would look really nice! Especially if it were under a layer of epoxy (or some other sealant) to give it some depth. I really like this tutorial!
+Samuel Weaver Yeah, if it's going to be used as a top surface on furniture, you'd probably want a coat of epoxy, or some other type of heavy clear coat on top like that. I'd also recommend letting it sit for several days (maybe a week or longer?) to deepen and become more solid before adding the clear coat. I did mine a bit quick for the video. If it's just a piece of yard art, wall art, etc., you can just leave it raw and let it develop a deeper patina over time.
K where do you get a sheet of steel?
Dear Kevin, I needed to “Rust” several brand new Mason Jar lids instantly for nightlights I’m making my grandchildren. I saw several products online that would have worked with an average price of $28! Thank you for saving me so much money! I have all the ingredients I need in my house including the spray bottles. You’re the man! I’m going to make sure I tell my grandchildren that science is cool and so are you! ♥️👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Excellent, just the info I was looking for. Thanks !
Glad you liked it!
This potbelly stove I got needed a new back so I put in new stove pipe, paint stripped it and used your formula. It rusted the new back perfectly to match the old rusted stove. You are correct about it being only a beginning rust and could probably be completely removed with steel wool but the look is real rust. Thanks for the video info.
Thanks bro. I knew I could count on UA-cam to speed the process. Great video 😎
This was a very informative and I inspiring video, good job guys!
your passion for rust... is awesome.
I have done similar techniques for years. I target where I Patina Copper Mostly. Great Video dude!
Just did this today on a barn star my mom wanted rusted and may I just say WOW!! It looks absolutely amazing!!!!! I missed it with black paint to give it depth and even more depth by using gloss clear coat to.stop the rusting it looks crazy amazing and giving me some great ideas for a rat rod car 10/10 subscribing
Awesome! Glad it worked out well for you. Thanks for subscribing!
what kind of clear coat where you using? is it something special rust stoper coat for metal or some kind of regular acrilic coats you can find in paint shops?
This is excellent! I just watched all your wood treatment videos, but this one turned me into a subscriber. Thanks for the learning!
Awesome. Every once in a while, a good idea pops into my head. Glad you liked it!
Appreciate this. Just got an ammo bin for my post apocalyptic larp. This'll help with that. Thanx!!!
I had to drop a like cuz he looked so happy love your positive energy keep it up
Very simple & extremely effective, thanks for sharing!
you're welcome!
That was awesome and you did a fantastic job of explaining the process. Thank you.
Thanks! Glad you like it.
Never thought someone would ever use rust as an artistic look! 😯
I am always wanting to cleanse it off all the metal parts of my vehicle and coat it with anti-rust products instead.
This is a great cheap way to make some rust FAST! I am using this right now to use in a diy wood stain.
Great video! Thanks for sharing your techniques!
I love it Kevin! Job well done 😊
If the rust is a bit fragile just gently splash with a small amount of rust converter or black tea solution (yes a tea bag in hot water). If you do it right you will get a tougher brown/black surface. I did it on a garden screen and it looks great.
Worked perfectly, thank you!
This is one of my favorite videos! I have a wall piece that I want to perform this technique on. It is in my bathroom and was painted gold. Should I remove the gold paint first? Cathryn
+AMATEUR DECORATING LIKE A PRO Thanks! Yes, you'd need to remove any coatings on it and get down to the raw metal, so the solution can start eating at it to produce the rust. If any gold paint is on it, it will be like the sections I clear coated & won't rust.
yes
I'm looking to do some testing on some oils and greases on metals and which ones protect the most. Would this be a good solution to use minus the vinegar pre-spray? Looking to dump the coated metal in a container full of this.
Thanks
This worked great! I also used your solution to make some red iron oxide for some pyrotechnic things I'm working on
WorldEnds4u For that electrolysis is way way way better
@@LightBwoi yay for thermite
Hey, great easy video! I'm making a Tudor dress cage for an art project and will be making it with mild flat steel bar, will it rust the same? Thanks!
Super helpful I’m using this video now to rust some steel, just wondering how long you waited in between the coats of vinegar ? I know you said till it drys but just a time frame that you used, I was doing it like 20 mins in between and I wouldn’t see any dripping or wet parts at that point but should it be longer?
This worked great! Thanks for the tip.
love it...Just what I needed....thanks for good instruction...
Really, really rusty patina fast. Cogent explanation and demo thx
What kind of clear coat did you use?
I built a fence with sheet metal and I want to retain the patina and color.
Thank you for your answer
Curious, what clear coat did you use? Any specific type? Thanks.
Great video. I am making candle holders, using a galvanized steel conduit box to hold a square chunk of wood. I will remove the galvanization, make it look rusty but then I want to seal it to stop any more oxidation. What coating would you recommend. Are there any non-toxic clear coating (I have to stay away from toxic fumes of any kind due to my liver)? Thanks.
After you have applied the solution, will the item continue to oxidize and rust over time? I wonder would the metal deteriorate and lose its strength. I may rust a panel and have something hanging from it - but I want to make sure it won't continue to rust and break apart.
Amazing video. Thank you!
Who would have thought rust is so beautiful 👌
I'm a collector of vintage advert tins. Sometimes I'll acquire one that just doesn't have enough rust. Any suggestions on how to not "oxide" the entire images?
Do you rinse before you clear it? Was curious if the clear would peel? Thanks though for a great vid! I want to age some shiny carriage bolts for a project. They look plated, not galvanized so I’ll probably hit them with a wire wheel before spraying with your concoction, Rusty 3K or whatever you called it. Jim
Very nice!! Very good and easy way to rust faster! I will try it very soon in my new bike project ;) tks sir
Thanks a lot. Life saver. Bless you bob😎
I'm thinking about clear coating the whole thing, then use an exacto knife to draw something by scratching that coat, and then spray acid on it. I wonder if it would be enough to make it corrode well to make the design visible.
Amazing, I’m going to use your method to do my kitchen cabinet doors. I had metal covers made. Question… is there a way to distress without too much red and more gray/black? 🥂💓
Hi great video thanks for it. I have a question is hydrogen peroxide essential for this application? Because i am so allergic to peroxide (deadly level) thanks again.
Really cool! Thanks!
Hi, amazing video! Would this work on different metals?
Hi and thanks for the video, very helpful. I am just wondering what to do as I think my metal has a coating on it. How can I remove that from it first?
It would depend on what type of coating it was.
I used your process on some shelving for a restaurant. Used polyurethane to clear coat (2X). The humidity this weekend caused the rust to bleed through the poly making it entirely wet. Any solutions here?
Great info! Thanks 👍☀️
Do you need to neutralize the acids prior to clear coating? I had someone tell me that was needed or else it will keep rusting. ? Also, ive applied my rusty 3000 solution and got great results but the colors keep changing day to day ( I haven’t clear coated yet) have you ran into this? And how do I stop it from changing? I’m assuming clear coat.
Thanks!
Any idea what could I use to quickly rust mason jar rings?
What is the intro music?
Also going to use this to rust an art project.. tried to do it with HCl.. it didn't work as well as i expected.. as in not AT ALL.
do you have the article where you get the rust martials from? I am creating a solution to increase the corrosion resistant in aluminum and want to set it by the same way you did but I need a reference
Great effect, thank you! Unfortunately, I need that on aluminum, I used "Modern Masters - iron reactive paint" and it worked quite well but results are inconsistent, blotchy or uniform, impossible to control depending on temperature and humidity and it seems that this product is now discontinued anyway. If I ever can get some of that Iron paint or equivalent, I will try your "Rusty 3000" it seems to work much better than their.
Do you have any suggestion for a product to "rust" aluminum and perhaps plastic? If I can't find real rust I will have to get artsy and sponge paint texture and colors. Late thanks for the video.👍🏻
I painted the object i want to rust. Can I still rust parts of it or does the paint prevent this from working?
That is awesome! I'm planning to paint a picture of Mars in rust. So, I'm hoping this will work with a bunch of nails and screws I have laying around. I really just need the rust juice left after the nails have rusted.
Did it work? If it did I’d love to see some pics!
@@connordrysdale5333 I ended up making a watercolor by drying out the rust residue left behind, grinding it, and then mixing it with gum arabic, but the result was not what I envisioned. I was hoping it would continue rusting after I applied the paint, but it didn't, and the color that I ended up with was more of a burnt umber than the rusty orange red that I was hoping for.
I'll have to try it again, though. I had another jar of stuff rusting away, and I accidentally knocked it over, and gave up on that project after that. Lol!
Hi, I have a roll of thin galvanized metal. I patina coper with vinegar or amonia and salt and it becomes beautiful blues and greens.
Can I make those colors with Galvanized metal??
Or does it only work with brass and copper? I'm trying to find ways to patina colors to galvanized metals so I can use this role of metal for jewelry :). Thanks.
You can rub the rust lightly with steel wool and then you Boil the steel part in clean distilled water. This changes it to black rust, a kinda good rust unlike the red rust that spreads like cancer on everthing it touches. Repeat the rust, steel wool boil process until it looks like it wont rust anymore, then after boiling it you can oil it. You get a black coating, a Bluing finish that should last for years.
Theres a guy named Axel Kriloff that painted with rust effects and created many of the album covers for the band "dirge" Theres a video of one of their albums called "Blight and Vision below a faded sun" that is full of his artwork and i really want to try this method to create stuff similar to that.
Finally, I been tryna find out how to make metal rust to have the perfect Halloween ends knife replica thank u sm
Nice work , how can I paint a lighting like il fatale?
@MrDiyDork does this process work on cor ten?
Awesome man doing this to my car .. can’t wait he’ll of a video
Hey, great video, super simple and easy to understand. I am making a rusted dress cage for my university project with flat mild steel, will it rust the same? Thank you!
Thanks. I should work for you. Just make sure to clean the grease & any scale coating that might on our steel first. You could also then go over it real quick with a medium grit sandpaper, scotchbrite pad, or steel wool to slightly rough up the surface and give it some "tooth" for the solution to bite into.
What are your recommendations for corregated metal?
Good video what part does the salt come in
hell ya thank you this video was the most help ever.
Awesome! Glad you liked it.
Will this work on stainless steel? Will it continue to rust more (in a bad way) if left outside?
helpful. thanks!
Can you keep the mixture (hydrogen peroxide, vinegar and salt) for weeks or months? Does it lose its umph while it sits in bottle.
Hello! Cool video, do you know how to rust it to black colour? Thank you
Very Cool!!! 👍
What percentage was the hydrogen peroxide?
How would I do this to hinges with a zinc coating? I have seen the torch and acid methods, but looking for something with natural ingredients if possible. Thank you.
Hmm, I'm not really sure. My first guess would be to see if you could sand off the finish, so this solution could get straight to the raw metal. I'm guessing that's what the acid does.
What did you use for the clear coat?
good job.i wonder after rust what i can do for fix.? thanks
Use vinegar.
Nice! What effect would this have on wood? I'm trying to rust up steel belts wrapped around oak wine barrel table and thinking I should remove them (?)
It wood make the wood look grey and antiqued. Kinda like old drift wood
Can you use the same process with metal chain ??
what's up man im planning a rat look on a vw notchback 1968 and I seen this video it looks great. I just wanted to ask can you perhaps list the things you used. Thanks
I used regular cheap peroxide, plain white vinegar, and table salt in the amounts I mentioned in the video. And I cleaned the metal with a degreaser. I cleared the whole thing with a cheap can of spray paint clear, but I'd think that a better, auto-grade clear would hold up better on a car if you plan to clear it at some point.
I wonder if this would work on the tips of nails so after its hammered in you see the tops of the rusted nail sticking out...
Very cool!
You made Peracetic acid which is an oxidizing corrosive. It can be pretty vicious so be careful with fumes and getting it on your skin.
Thanks for the info!
Using household vinegar, 3% household peroxide and a little salt.....This is an extremely mild solution, "vicious" no, not at all in fact. This isn't going to hurt you unless you decide to drink it, spray it up your nose, or in your eyes. Which I'm guessing from your lack of knowledge is something that you might be dumb enough to try!
Don't spew bull shit, you obviously have no idea what you are talking about.
And yes, I did do A-levels in organic + non organic chemistry, whereas you didn't.
Thanks for the bullshit
I'm getting some "stainless steel" utensils laser engraved as a gift and was wondering if this method would help reveal any possibility of corrosion down the line? Thanks for the info! :) :)
will/and or..maybe would this work for model trains...because i didn't think that it really would unless you use like either stuff thats similar...and or so/decals or so/something like that. But then considering how the little bridge thats about maybe 25-/to 30 something minutes away or so has a little/small but still kinda big...goes over the freeway i-65/i65, and how the supports/wall for the fence is concrete with square holes cut out, and the fence poles that hold it up are metal...and how again that the metal rusts on to the concrete...and what really gave me the idea, was when i had a little hexagon shape tub thing, for the robotic hex bug fish...and when i had filled it up with water, i had some type of little metal 6 sided nut thing, and i had dropped it in the water, for got it was in there a few days later or so,...and it had rusted the nut from silver to rusty on to the plastic in the same size and maybe similar to the same shape as the nut. But thats what got me thinking after awhile or so, if thats actually even possible...because i like do think that it would be...in terms of putting the metal,/and or maybe...piece of metal rather on the body, and when you either leave it out which i was originally thinking; oh yeah...actually i had the/and or a idea of leaving a metal toy o scale train put side, and or i guess any size train for that matter rather...but anyway, so i had the idea of leaving a metal 1/one out there in the rain on the wooden table thats on our back patio. Then leaving the metal on the plastic, after that, the metal on the plastic body, with also figuring out someway to take the body off so the wheels don't rust and make it to where the train cant really roll as andor that easy...(and the same with the plastic too). But then i had the same idea in terms of putting/i guess maybe abd or submerging the train/whole car...(train car), under water, and taking not the wheels off...but the truck thing that holds the wheels or so. then just putting the piece of metal on top, and or few pieces of metal or so along the top with it under water...and maybe like, it will.would or so rust on to the car and drip down just like the real thing. (and sorry if this is a little long and or repetitive in spots)
I want to rust paperclips for Junk Journals. I was wondering how toxic the fumes are. Cleaning sites say do not combine Hydrogen Peroxide and vinegar as the fumes are toxic. Maybe keeping my glass jar of rusting clips outdoors would be a good solution?
Some shallow bury with a marker for location
Super cool! When you say you “ clear coat it”, what exactly are you using to do so? Can’t wait to do this, thank you for sharing!
It’s just called clear coat. If you go to your hardware store and go to the spray paint section they will most likely have cans of clear coat. Clear coat is just see through paint
Very cool, I will definitely try this out. What is the recommended strength on the Peroxide?
Thanks! It was off the shelf 3% peroxide.
Im trying to make thermite will this work to make my iron oxide
I have galvanized metal. Do I need to sand it to make it rustic like this?
Thank you for the help!
You're welcome!
I tried it. Works awesome!
What do you recommend to rust stainless steel?
does this work on the last Rust version
BTW, would you know if this technique will work on Aluminum. That's what I'm after. I want to age a new shiny cigarette case to look like its vintage. Thanks in advance for any help you can give me. Aloha...
0:52
Will this for sure work on my girlfriend if she's listening to metal rusting music bands like the iron carbon's or AC/DC non galvanized album? Or she should just get a tan instead like I've been telling her?
Great video. Very thorough and easy to follow. The reason I found your video is that I'm researching doing my ceiling in thin gauge steel, and trying to give it that old rustic look. The problem I'm facing is that I need 110 panels (2'x2') for the complete ceiling and I'm trying to find an easy way to create rust on so many panels. I've done crazier long projects before and so patience and perseverance is not an issue if need be. Can you possible recommend any ideas that may "speed up" the process? Summer is coming soon here in the outskirts of Toronto, does the summer heat improve, or possible accelerate the affect ? Do you have a bunch of friends with spray bottles who can spare a day or two LOL?? Thanks in advance.
I think you could lay them out and then use some of those big yard sprayers that you pump up to try and speed things up. Then just leave them sitting out for a day or two (or longer if needed) until they look like you want.
Thought of that, I think I'll give it a try.Thanks
i know this vid is old.. so i hope u see my post.. how could I get a rusty look with patina on wood furniture? I like the rusty look.. i did one of those rust activator kits (very expensive) for 2oz of hardly nothing.. But i did get the front of a cabinet done.. While i was working on it outside.. someone drove by and purchased it.. it really did stand out... so now im trying to figure a formula of my own to do this as often as i like.. But how do i get a painted surface to be metal-ish and react to the diy rust solution recipe.. ???
D'Ann Kaady-Maras
I know more about metal patinas than wood. This is what I would try from working with a faux finisher as part of a artist guild. I presume this is being applied to wood that is not already treated with paint or stains. My best guess would be to try different darkness of wood stains , possibly a few at the same time to get the right look. Like start with butter dish of stain and dab the wood with a sponge or loofa or something equivalent to get the correct texture you are looking for. It may have to dry between layers. one dry layer on top of the other , light to dark( can always go darker , hard to go lighter) . Till it looks how you want. Try with a piece of scrap wood to get your technique down. Again I have worked with metal my whole life , not wood .