stangboy
Founding Member
Smart man! Bring it home running and looking pretty an she'll accept it a little easier.Nah, i will be taking it from the yard to a friends body shop to get it running and reassembled first.
Smart man! Bring it home running and looking pretty an she'll accept it a little easier.Nah, i will be taking it from the yard to a friends body shop to get it running and reassembled first.
EXactly!Smart man! Bring it home running and looking pretty an she'll accept it a little easier.![]()
I "dyed" the vinyl fabric on the top of the red cars door panels. It seemed way more durable and more like what you'd expect a dye to be versus when you spray it on the hard plastic stuff where it would scratch off very easily. But on the soft vinyl.....it was like it was done that way from the factory.I've got a question for everyone. Now that i have two clean covers for the rear seat, how do i dye them black?
Regular clothing dye doesn't work on plastic cloth. It can't absorb into the threads.
I've read about using spray on dyes that essentially are nothing more than painting your seat covers. I guess i can do this in the end, i may just give it a try for the hell of it.
Spray an adhesion promoter first, then a hardened base coat. Afterwards i guess i would need to comb/brush the cover to separate the fibers to have some semblance of softness.
Anyone got anything for me here?
I really only need it to last about a year, then I'll be able to afford my new seat covers.I used a fabric paint to recolor the interior in an old car once. It was fabric paint made by duplicolor....I think. I used it on the carpet too. It was nice a black for almost a year. That stuff faded out over time....leaving the interior looking spray bombed. I could've resprayed it....or actually read the directions....but I didn't. I painted the plastic trim with it also. It stayed on as long as you didn't scratch it.
Maybe, with adhesion promoter, it would've stayed on longer.
That's all I've got, Dave.
Thanks Mike, I'm only wondering about the cloth seats and the soft plastic sides. Your success encourages me to give it a try. What's the worst that can happen?I "dyed" the vinyl fabric on the top of the red cars door panels. It seemed way more durable and more like what you'd expect a dye to be versus when you spray it on the hard plastic stuff where it would scratch off very easily. But on the soft vinyl.....it was like it was done that way from the factory.
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Done before the "red car" was actually red.
The vinyl trim I'm not worried about, it's the cloth part. It's made with a plastic thread, not porous at all.I'll see if I can find some pics. But as long as the parts are clean, and you scuff and use the painting prep on any vinyl parts, it'll turn out fine. I did a full interior of a 67 coupe once. Let me find pics.
I just worry about on the seat covers rubbing it off with my big old butt.Dave I used SEM vinyl dye in the spray cans to change my son's nasty blue door panels from blue to black. I scrubbed them with detergent, then wiped them down with the prep chemical and sprayed them. Vinyl, cloth, and carpet. All of it. It turned out looking like it was made that way.
I'm not sure i understand the question Allen....Is that a masking sticker Dave?
I'm not sure i understand the question Allen....