Victrolaboy wrote:I don't think I could ever paint roses that would look good. My plan was to pant the horn glossy black and do gold pin striping. What do you guys think I should do?
-Nick
Why black? Isn't there a color you'd prefer to have on a phonograph horn?
I agree about painting the flowers (although I'm sure Martin was joking)... Don't exceed your skills. The original flowers on phonograph horns were painted by fellows doing dozens of them per day. They're usually quite artistically done, and unless you have skills like that, your efforts will be wasted.
I have a horn (a very unusual one) that looked great except some bozo had inexplicably taken sandpaper or some similar abrasive and scrubbed off ONE of its rose blossoms.

I took it to a professional artist who paints flowers on phonograph horns. The outside edges of the original blossom remained, so she wanted to "fill in" the center and blend it into the outside of the blossom. Heck, it was like connecting the dots. Should be a breeze, she said, although as she looked closely at the other intact blossoms she remarked, "Whoever did this was an
excellent artist." I dropped off that horn in May. She wasn't satisfied with her work until the following March. By the time she was ready to relinquish it, she had wiped away her work and started over 3 or 4 times. When I went to her house to retrieve the horn, I was pleased; complimenting her on how good it looked. She told me to examine her blossom closely and then look at one of the originals. You'd never notice unless you examined carefully, but there is indeed a difference. I'm no artist, but I can tell a beautifully rendered, confident, effortless painting when I see one. Those original blossoms were all that, and the lady artist's blossom was a painstaking copy, but it lacks the mastery of the others. I'm so glad I didn't try it myself!
George P.