BruceW Posted Tuesday at 12:46 AM Posted Tuesday at 12:46 AM I am taking on a painting job for a fellow collector and was wondering if anyone has attempted the same thing before and has any advice before I jump into the deep end. This horn is a translucent red over silver. I believe the silver is nickel plating but I have not tested it yet. If it is I plan to strip what little remaining red paint off, polish the nickel and then repaint red over top again. If it is not Nickel plating I can repaint the silver and then try the red. The original red looks hand painted with streaks allowing the silver to shine through the thin areas. Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks Bruce
Jerry Posted Wednesday at 03:47 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:47 PM (edited) The bright undercoat was usually just a tin plate and not nickel. That's why it degraded so easily. I believe that when the Smiths did their marvelous repaints of these horns, they stripped whatever original paint remained, then polished whatever was underneath, whether it be tin plate or just bare steel. They then sprayed the translucent "candy color" over the polished tin/bare metal. Again, I don't know this for a fact, but to me, that is how their repaints always looked. My guess on how the original red finish was applied would be that it was simply dipped in the translucent paint/varnish and hung to dry, hence the streaks. Fast, easy & cheap. Edited Wednesday at 03:49 PM by Jerry
phonogfp Posted Wednesday at 04:00 PM Posted Wednesday at 04:00 PM I repainted several flower horns back in the 1970s-80, and I found that due to the imperfections of the metal (from rust, dents, scratches, etc.), I achieved the best results by using a silver or gold undercoat for translucent finishes. I usually used silver, but I recall trying gold with a red overspray and it looked nice. George P.
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