Look for a better horn, or buy a new repro.
That's my advice.
Tony K.
Edison Collector/Restorer
I can't do any more harm to the horn because someone else has trashed it. They sanded off the original paint and painted it some kind of ugly gold color. All I'm doing is reprinting it a different color in this case a semi transparent red very close to the original type if paint used back then.NEFaurora wrote:They were right. Leave the horn alone. Either keep it as is or sell it. Do not mess with it.
Look for a better horn, or buy a new repro.
That's my advice.
)
Tony K.
Edison Collector/Restorer
Now, if you are considering gold edging on the bell of the horn, as the photo suggests, you would do well to make some sort of template to ensure an even line.Victrolaboy wrote:The horn that I want to repaint was already sanded and repainted gold by some one else in the past. So far I have removed all the gold paint very carefully and I have put several coats of sandable primer paint. The paint I'm using is Dulicolor metal cast paint which is made to be sprayed on Crome so it has a semi transparent look just like the original paint. I'm doing a silver base coat to get the correct color and you can use this paint on non Crome surfaces if you do a silver base coat.
John, I've been printing on decal paper for a while and have never even considered the possibility of a white overlay.welshfield wrote:I have determined that on some horns, at least, the flowers are decals or transfers. I copied flowers from many horns on eBay, isolated the background with Photoshop, and found way too many details to be exactly the same from flower to flower, stem to stem, leaf to leaf. Some of the decals seem to have been cut and pasted to make them appear to be "hand painted" but the similarities still continued.
With this in mind, I assembled a flower design from one attractive horn, fiddled with the colors on Photoshop to get them just right, and then printed them out on blank decal paper I bought on line. I applied this to a newly painted horn, oversprayed with shellac to dissolve the decal material, leaving only the flower transfer print, and the horn is absolutely effective.
By the way, I used the clear version of decal paper which will not transfer white since color printers do not print "white". I then overlayed the white portions of the flowers carefully cut from a printout on thin white paper.
John