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Old June 2nd, 2019, 18:33   #4
TopGunnerz
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: North York / Scarborough
Quote:
Originally Posted by Drake View Post
The thing about specialized camo paint (Krylon and the like) is that they're meant to be easily removable without damaging the underlying finish, and they have an ultra-flat finish.

Satin finish paints, and even satin clear coats, will ruin the camo effect by giving the surface gloss (think wet surface): whatever is painted stands out by having a uniform highlight to it. Even Flat finish paints have a tiny amount of gloss to them (automotive flat black, for example, is a good match for black gun finishes -- which aren't completely flat).

Stone texture paints are a mixed bag, some have some gloss. I'd worry the texture would mess with fit between parts etc.

Chalky finish paints might be good if you wanted to simulate wear/give it a distressed look. But I doubt you'd find good camo colours in chalky finish so you'd be better using real camo paint and wearing it down (which is pretty easy given their not-so-permanent nature).

I'm not sure what your goal is here? You want to make the camo paintjob more permanent? You could use the regular camo paints and apply a matte clear finish -- although be weary which you use, many "matte" clear coats have a sheen to them. Valspar matte finish is pretty flat (available at Lowes).

As for other paints, maybe if you want a greater variety of camo colours and don't mind more permanence, you could go with scale model paints (Tamiya, Testors, Humbrol, Vallejo). Tamiya has rattle cans (limited variety), the others need to be painted or airbrushed on. But this seems like an expensive/inconvenient route unless you're looking for some very specific colours.
Thanks for the info! You are right about basically everything, after trying out the satin finish in particular, there is quite a lot of gloss to it.

As for Valspar, I never considered it and I will look into it more. The chalky finishes only come in blue or white, at least locally. Tamiya paints I have considered but yes they are very expensive in comparison to the typical spray paints.

As for my goal, originally I wanted alternatives to Krylon camo paints.
But after looking at several local Canadian Tires, Home Depots, and Walmarts, I found that Krylon camo paints do not exist anywhere local anymore (I last actively looked for them a couple of years ago).

I found that the only camo paint available locally/ for cheap is rustoleum camo, and that is only a cover, not a primer and cover like Krylon, and I could only find a very light mint green for any type of flat green paint.

My new goal is to find more flat green paint or find Krylon camo paint locally again. Anyone ever find Krylon camo paint recently?
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