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Awesome job, love the techniques you show in this. Will definitely try these out myself. Very much appreciated! I am very impressed with the final on that PI case, I have to try this out.
Glad you liked it! its a really fun process. Don't forget the holidays are right around the corner. Could be used to make some unique gifts! Thanks for watching!
Have fun! And remember, if it isn't looking the way you want it to at first, keep adding more ink and keep brushing until you get the look you are going for! The first time I ever tried this, it took me a while to get the hang of it, but once I figured it out, it was super easy! Thanks for watching!
For the primer as long as it it a "filler" primer you should be able to use any brand. As for the varnish, the only one I know of that works with alcohol inks is the Krylon Kamar Varnish
On things with relatively little geometry like the Raspberry Pi case it isn't too bad. The actual wood grain painting part of that only took about 15 minutes total and that's only because I was being a little more picky than I probably should have. (Probably didn't help that I hadn't had my morning coffee yet 😂) Depending on what you need your print to look like this is definitely one of the easier ways to get a somewhat realistic wood grain look. If you are doing anything with a ton of geometry like the Indian sculpture, then yes it can definitely be a ton of work! Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much again PCBWay for sponsoring todays video! If you have never checked them out before, please do! They have some pretty cool services at really good prices! Use this link to get $5 off your first order for new customers! pcbway.com/g/qIMQWR
That actualy came out looking really good. Especially the cast
Thank you! And thanks for watching! 😁
Awesome job, love the techniques you show in this. Will definitely try these out myself. Very much appreciated! I am very impressed with the final on that PI case, I have to try this out.
Thank you! It’s a fun technique to play with. Also really useful for possible gift ideas with the holidays coming up 😉
As a woodworker, I think they look great :-)
Thank you. Means a lot coming from a wood worker!
Thank you!!
Thank you for your thank you! haha.. Thanks for watching!
Very interesting project and very good information. Thank you for the video.
Thank you for the kind comment!
Great video. Thanks for taking the time. I’ve saved this because I’m going to try this at some point in the near future. The results look really good!
Glad you liked it! its a really fun process. Don't forget the holidays are right around the corner. Could be used to make some unique gifts! Thanks for watching!
good effort and thanks for sharing the knowledge, it really looks good to me, both the raspberry case and the sculpture
Thank you for the kind words. Means a lot to me!
Sweet! Gonna give this whirl. Thanks for the tips, big dawg.
Have fun! And remember, if it isn't looking the way you want it to at first, keep adding more ink and keep brushing until you get the look you are going for! The first time I ever tried this, it took me a while to get the hang of it, but once I figured it out, it was super easy! Thanks for watching!
Nice, will definitely try. Thank you
Hope you have as much fun with it as I did! Thanks for watching!
Regarding the primer and varnish, can these be any brand? What specs should we look in to? Thanks
For the primer as long as it it a "filler" primer you should be able to use any brand. As for the varnish, the only one I know of that works with alcohol inks is the Krylon Kamar Varnish
So awesome!!
Thank you!
What spray/color did you use after sanding the primer?
Rust-oleum Nutmeg
Print, spray, ink paint, ink, paint, use all ink, paint, DONE🎉
Don't forget the ink paint! 😂
It looks decent, but I feel it is too much work for the result.
On things with relatively little geometry like the Raspberry Pi case it isn't too bad. The actual wood grain painting part of that only took about 15 minutes total and that's only because I was being a little more picky than I probably should have. (Probably didn't help that I hadn't had my morning coffee yet 😂) Depending on what you need your print to look like this is definitely one of the easier ways to get a somewhat realistic wood grain look. If you are doing anything with a ton of geometry like the Indian sculpture, then yes it can definitely be a ton of work! Thanks for watching!
@@makerscorner93 Yeah it's fine for one item, but if you are mass producing or making print on demand, it is certainly too much manual labour.