Sounds crazy but I'm thinking of going real old school and using a basic wall paint roller to roll the blood red and cream color onto my Chevy. Anyone out there ever tried this method ? Any pictures before I attempt it on a test panel? Let me know your thoughts Colin m SoCal
I've done it, but only with primer and it worked like a charm, but you should use a lacker roller, they're a little finer in the hairs on the roll. Klaus
I've heard of folks doing this "back in the day", with either a roller or a brush. As it was explained to me, the key ingredient to getting a good looking paint job is heat. Specifically, the car should sit out in the sun for several hours before being painted. The hot body panels will cause the rolled or brushed paint to swell, eliminating brush or roller strokes. I was warned that if I ever tried this (and I haven't), never attempt it with anything but old school lacquer paints, and never a metallic. All that being said, I'm a professional body man who has made a career of high quality paint work on high-end cars. The only brush I ever use is made by Iwata, and that is for true-fire flame jobs, highlighting and texture, or touch-ups. Everything else gets sprayed with an HVLP gravity-feed Devilbis. LOL I wouldn't recommend doing a paint job with a roller, but I want pics of how it turns out. Good luck!
I've rolled rustoliumum thinned with minneral spirits. 1 part thinner to 2 parts paint if its cool out side, or half and half if hot. Do a lot of coats, and set sand, or leave.. I used the super fine mini rollers from home depot.. I've had real nice results, and durable.
what is old school about painting a car with a roller? just sounds like a dumb idea too me, Unless you want your car to look like your living room wall. But hell I am curoius myself as to just how bad it will look, So go ahead and post pics after....You can always sand it back off.....LOL
Hate to be the one to say "do a search" but search for $50 paintjob and get all the information and techniques. But depends if you want a cheap paintjob that with lots of wet sanding yields reasonable results.
I worked with a guy from England years ago that did restoration work on antique cars and they did all the paint with bushes. He said they would do about ten to twelve coats of lacquer and wet sand between every coat.
They call it a Liver because you can't live without it. Wear gloves and a respirator. It's the solvents ! Actually, in the 50's, I don't think they color sanded, they just rubbed it out. That's the story I heard, not being there
Back in the late"50s" I painted my 50 Olds 4dr with a roller. Painted it gray and all the kids wrote their names all over it.... It was BLAST
Myself and some mates painted our friends car(holden gemini)with a 4inch wide brush what we did was put the paint can into a bucket of warm water the results must have been prety good he left it painted that way untill he sold the car 5 yrs later .By the way we painted it hot pink so it wasnt because we painted it a cool colour(even his wife wouldent be seen in it but he drove it every day).
I used to paint my stock cars with Rustoleum paint and those throwaway mini rollers you get in hardware stores. The ones that use the package as the roller pan. Of course in the full sun, which is a double edged sword if it was too hot out, it would start drying right as it was laid on. It looked great from the stands, up close, so-so. I'm sure it could be improved upon with some color sanding and multiple coats. Bob
Just for fun I wanted to try the "$50.00 paint job" method. I only painted a locker door and it came out really nice. Lots of wet sanding.
painting with a brush or roller isnt old school. it was done but by people would didnt have the funds to do it right.i have heard some did it in the day but it wasnt a regular cool thing to do. i just started hearing about this method again a few yrs ago. we do high dollar paint in our shop. i couldnt wrap my mind around why anyone would want to do it. i dont want to make anyone mad but imo its kinda a ratrod attitude thing.i know there are more than one way to skin a cat but sometimes its just better to leave the cat alone.
and when did old henry quit doing it with a brush?i quess if you were going to paint a t fine but not on anything much later.but its his car so have at it. but i think a man should take alittle pride in his ride. and try to make it ,ah hell never mind.lol
I painted my bed cover on my F100 with satin Rustoleum and with a fine knap roller. I will try to post a picture. It worked out fine and you can't tell it was rolled. Took a while to cure out, but looks great.
The paint really doesn't care how it got on the car... brush, roller, spray or hand grenade. If you prep the surface well you can wet sand the car and get a pretty darn good finish... In the 60's we used to paint our rides in the alley using the ass end of an Electrolux vacuum cleaner... the nearest air compressor was at the local gas station. If we had waited for one of the guys to come up with a compressor, our first paint jobs would have been on Ford Pintos and Chevy Novas instead of Deuces and Shoeboxes.... Many of those great old cars you see in old photos were painted with a brush or got a lacquer spray job in someone's driveway. Here's a Rustoleum roller job on a Mustang hood... I can see YOUR reflection in it! http://meguiarsonline.com/forums/photopost/data/1096/medium/Hood_final_polish_006.JPG
I can remember seeing a few car's, back in the day, that were painted with a roller and house paint, they looked like shit. To each his own, I guess. Are you planning on painting it to match your house?
I'm not sure anyone here is thinking of using house paint. Any solid color SS enamel can be applied how ever, like krooser said " The paint really doesn't care how it got on the car... brush, roller, spray or hand grenade." Rustoleum, trem-clad, valspar tractor & implement paint, can be put on too & with the hardner works and looks pretty good. Show winners, probably not but decent, reasonable, backyard approved, shining paint. There's plenty of idle dry time involved, lots of labor wet sanding, I can't see any sane person that would actually pay to have it done this way. But if you have nothing but time, don't have a compressor or gun, have neighbor issues, enjoy shoulder cramps, short on cash but long on enthusiasm, there's no reason why you couldn't have a decent paint job.
In the 50's that was the way to paint the farm rigs along with the old cars that lower waged hotrodders owned along with every other highschool kids old car. I have done them before with varying results, My high school ride( 45.00 car) 34 -3win. Ford coup had one we did in Auto shop at school in Enamel and you couldn't tell it wasn't sprayed after wet sanding. All our farm trucks were painted the same color and sanded to a bright finish in the 60's. I wouldn't do it again because spraying is easyer, but it can be done with good results if the paint is thick enough.
Worked ok for me, but labor intensive five years later still holding up and reflecting the tank in it
Did it with a lot of coats of thinned down satin black rustoleum and a lot of wet sanding over a sanded black car. Two years and it still looks good. I have not tried a drastic color change and i think that it would take a lot more coats and a better prepared surface to start. Hot Rod did an article where they did a white gloss color on an old corvair. I stayed away from anything glossy because the it takes more perfection. I used both foam rollers and brushes with a lot of smoothing out. Do not paint it in direct sunlight on hot metal because the paint will dry on application on you will be sanding forever. I would get up in the morning early sand apply a coat let it dry a little then drive it to work and repeat the next day. Rustoleum is graet but I have been told that it will not let other types of paint adhere to it, so it needs to be painted with Rustoleum or completely stripped for any further paint jobs, so you might want to look into auto enamel instead I did not care. Hey I'm not diminishing the perfect paint jobs of a good body person, it's a real skill, but sometimes its about doing it yourself as best you can and having fun. Its cheap and something dad would of done and bragged about for the rest of his life.
Painting with a roller might be "old school" but it doesn't mean it's any good. Why would you want to do that?
As a professional painter I was using a roller to paint the raised guard rail stripes on a school bus once. A friend spotted me and I have never lived it down. And that was 30 years ago. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" /><o></o> Ps, it works great with a smooth roller and enamel, no masking!<o></o>