I dont mean to be offtopic but does someone know a method to get back into an Instagram account..? I stupidly forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me!
@Abel Harlem thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and Im waiting for the hacking stuff now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Love the right angle jig! I use transfer tape when I laser engrave. Just got my CNC router so it's a whole new learning process. Great video, voice over and editing. No long drawn out talking, right to the point A+ and you have a new subscriber.
In my career as a signcrafter, i started out hand-lettering, so i Can paint the lettering after carving. But i found your tutorial to be quite helpful...there's always a different way to accomplish the task.
Wow! This looks like a terrific process. Thank you for sharing it. I would love to learn more about how you design the sign letters/shapes and what v bit you use.
Thanks Dave. The vbit used in the video is an Onsrud 37-61. All of the signs are reproductions. To recreate the letters and shapes, I manually vectorized them in CorelDraw. This video provides some insight to the process: ruclips.net/video/gI4PpftT1tQ/видео.html
Thanks for a great video. I understand the use of shellac to cover the entire board before the Oracal is applied, but why do you apply more shellac after the routing has been done? Is it done to ensure no paint goes under the edge of the Oracal?
Before I got into the habit of applying shellac to the v-carved area, I would sometimes notice a fuzzy bleed through of paint into the subsurface of the masked area. In those instances, I believe that untreated wood fibers in the v-carved area became saturated with paint, and that the paint "wicked," though them. The shellac is intended to seal those fibers and prevent that from happening. It may very well help in the manner you described, in addition.
Great idea and one I will certainly use, but I'm very new CNC and have used a different method to achieve what you have done. I used milescraft templet and after painting the work, I just ran it through the thickness planner.
Thanks, Frederick. The thickness planer sounds like a good approach- especially when the carving is relatively deep and there is no paint on the surface.
Awesome video! I went to your tool list site and the foam brush link took me to the vynil link. Didn't know if you were aware of that. I am brand new to CNC and have a Onefinity scheduled for delivery in January. Look forward to seeing more videos
Zinsser makes a de-waxed shellac in a spray can as well - works great. Careful with the paint-on version, the primary one they sell is waxed and may mess with paint adhesion.
thank you for sharing. after 3 years, it's still useful to someone like me. :) anyway, can I ask you what wood you used here? I read all your answers and really appreciate for sharing all.
Hello, I amJessica from China Danuo Machinery Equipment Co., LTD. Our company's products include laser engraving machine, laser cutting machine, CNC Router and a series of ion cutting machines. If you are interested, you can add my Whatsapp:+86-13285336692 mail:Jessica@danuomachinery.com
So what if you had used some sort of finish, like lacquer, on the surface, let it dry, then put the masking on that.. Would the mask stick better, and help against bleeding underneath the edges?
hi sir, thx so much, i really apreciat this work, u can teach for us how to polish this wood to look very beautyful ? u watch some video of you channel and learned to use cnc fixed with corner bits, but its only it you use ? amazing job, thx for share sir.
Hello sir, very nice video Could u plz when ever u have time to list the final product which is the glossy finishing what did u use ? I bought the shellac from ur link , I’m just having problem in the end what to use to apply the final glossy look. Thank u
Thank you for the great video and how-to info. Can I ask you what fonts you found best to do this kind of work as well as the cutter bit you use too. The corner jig is a great idea as well. Great job!
Thanks Mark- glad you liked the video! I'm not sure that I've found any particular type of font family to be better than any other for V-carving. They all seem to work pretty well. Occasionally, I'll tweak (increase) the starting cut depth by 0.01 or 0.02 if a font naturally carves too shallow for my liking. Concerning the bit, I've been using an Onsrud 37-61. Wish I could claim credit for the offset jig- borrowed that idea from Shopbot.
I've been using clear spray paint to seal the endgrain, it shrinks and lifts the vinyl. I noticed the shellac worked great, have you had a problem with it? I guess I am asking is it my technique (too much paint or?) or the chemistry of the solvent that damages the oracal vinyl. Thanks for the great video
I have been playing with this concept lately and I cannot get the smooth edges, the vinyl wrinkles and allows the paint to get under. What do you recommend to solve this?
Sorry- I'm not familiar with 813. There are some reviews on amazon that seem to suggest issues with bubbles and poor adhesion. The 631 isn't the cheapest game in town, but it's always worked well for me.
I also us two coats of shellac on my red oak before adding the vinyl. Does adding the coat in the V carve help with paint bleeding? I do get some paint bleed that I can't sand out due to how deep it go.
I'm fairly certain that it does help, Matt. I think unless the wood fibers inside the v-carved area are sealed, paint can "wick" though them and appear just below the surface in the area that had been masked.
Thank you for the reply. I gave it a try and it turned out great! The only thing I noticed different was the paint didn't want to sit in some areas of the v-carve and it would just run from the away from it. I had to use a bush and dab the paint in that area. What type of paint are you using? Is it oil based or water?
Glad to hear it! I've had that happen, as well- just in an occasional, tiny area. My approach was also to dab it with a small artist brush- just as the paint was in the process of setting up a bit. I use only oil-based rattle cans- mostly Rustoleum Painters Touch 2x.
Hey man thanks for the video I am going to try your method I have been looking for good method of doing this as I have used high contact release paper, painters tape, masking tape, shelf liner, and usually resort to laser engraving my projects for clean painting lines but I noticed in your video you where not getting the vinyl to lift when cutting would you mind sharing your feeds and speeds that you used as well as the exact wood you used it looks like basic pine or douglas fur but I could be wrong thanks
You're welcome, ontheEdge. Looks like the carving was run at 12K RPM; 1.83 i.p.s. The wood is radiata (AKA Monterey) pine from Lowes / Home Depot- no knots, and nicer grain. I've never had a problem with Oracal 631 lifting, except one time when I had dust collection turned on.
buen video, lindo trabajo pero me gustraria saber como haces ese tipo de tipografia en madera, como la configuras para que escriba asi? se agradece el dato.
How do you manage to get several colours next to each other? Like at 22 sek into the video, where you have a white "G" on a red shield with black borders... Beautiful work btw!:)
Thanks Roger. Each element you mentioned is masked, cut / carved, shellacked, and painted separately. For example- the shield shape is cut out- either with a vinyl drag knife, or with a vbit (as a profile toolpath on the vector set to a depth of 1/32 inch). The vinyl is peeled, and area is shellacked, painted, and allowed to dry at least two days (as paint is on the surface). Next, a small piece of vinyl paint mask is applied over the shield area, and the letter "G" is carved. Shellac and paint are applied. Repeat for the ribbons and black border around the shield. Hope that makes sense.Part of the process: imgur.com/a/MKyJS
Great video. Still helping people 4 years later. Thanks
Cool technique! Always wondered how people were getting the paint so perfect in the engraved peices. Great clear instructions, thank you!
I dont mean to be offtopic but does someone know a method to get back into an Instagram account..?
I stupidly forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me!
@Levi Sam Instablaster =)
@Abel Harlem thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and Im waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Abel Harlem It worked and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
Thanks so much, you saved my account :D
@Levi Sam You are welcome xD
Very good narrative of your project. You are adept at presentations keep up the good work.
Thanks, Jacob- much appreciated! Hope to make additional videos before long.
Love the right angle jig! I use transfer tape when I laser engrave. Just got my CNC router so it's a whole new learning process. Great video, voice over and editing. No long drawn out talking, right to the point A+ and you have a new subscriber.
Many thanks, Brien!
Loved the narration and video editing skills. You sir earned a sub!
Thanks- much appreciated!
Great video love it!!
i couldn't agree any more
Followed your links. Bought the products and will try this method for my V-Carved items. And I should mention -- WELL DONE VIDEO too.
Thanks Steve- I appreciate it!
@@totrand I did try this and it worked very well. I shall use it again on more carvings.
Great- glad to hear that, Steve!
great job man, i needed to learn this and appreciate you
i just ruined a project because i dodnt add enough stuff and rushed, lesson learned
In my career as a signcrafter, i started out hand-lettering, so i Can paint the lettering after carving.
But i found your tutorial to be quite helpful...there's always a different way to accomplish the task.
Awesome work and technique! Glad I found you. +1sub. Cheers from Ontario!
Impressive! Congratulations, a truly superb job. Incredibly beautiful end result.
Thanks Massimiliano!
Hey pal. Well I'm from Trinidad. I love your work please make more videos. I are good
Thank you so much showing us how to do a great pint process. I will use in my projets.
Sucess for you man!!
Very clear instructions! Thanks
Great job on the detail. Very nice work.
Thank you so much for this excellent video. Subscribed!!
Wow! This looks like a terrific process. Thank you for sharing it. I would love to learn more about how you design the sign letters/shapes and what v bit you use.
Thanks Dave. The vbit used in the video is an Onsrud 37-61. All of the signs are reproductions. To recreate the letters and shapes, I manually vectorized them in CorelDraw. This video provides some insight to the process: ruclips.net/video/gI4PpftT1tQ/видео.html
Thanks for clear step by step instructions and video. Helpful for getting started with my CNC toy!
great video explaining a simple yet very effective technique!
Thanks, Stephen!
Beautiful work. I have just purchased my CNC router and am going to try this approach. *Thank you*
This looks great. How deep was thay V bit cut? I always run into issues where the cuts are either too deep or too shallow.
Thanks for a great video. I understand the use of shellac to cover the entire board before the Oracal is applied, but why do you apply more shellac after the routing has been done? Is it done to ensure no paint goes under the edge of the Oracal?
Before I got into the habit of applying shellac to the v-carved area, I would sometimes notice a fuzzy bleed through of paint into the subsurface of the masked area. In those instances, I believe that untreated wood fibers in the v-carved area became saturated with paint, and that the paint "wicked," though them. The shellac is intended to seal those fibers and prevent that from happening. It may very well help in the manner you described, in addition.
That really makes a good bit of sense. We will try this process - and your video is very helpful. When doing outdoor signs, what changes do you make?
Great idea and one I will certainly use, but I'm very new CNC and have used a different method to achieve what you have done. I used milescraft templet and after painting the work, I just ran it through the thickness planner.
Thanks, Frederick. The thickness planer sounds like a good approach- especially when the carving is relatively deep and there is no paint on the surface.
Interesting alternative approach. Thanks. It's given me some ideas.
Awesome video!
I went to your tool list site and the foam brush link took me to the vynil link. Didn't know if you were aware of that.
I am brand new to CNC and have a Onefinity scheduled for delivery in January. Look forward to seeing more videos
one of best cnc videos for me.. i like it
Thanks for sharing this practical knowledge
Great video! The finished product looks awesome too. Can you please share what bits you used for the entire job and where to get them? Thanks
I have a ShopBot and painting has been a nightmare. Just subscribed and I going to try this technique. Thanks for sharing.
Elegant and direct! Thanks for the class, will try with small projects on my desktop CNC.
I appreciate the feedback, Mario. Thanks!
great video, answered so many questions on how to do that
Zinsser makes a de-waxed shellac in a spray can as well - works great. Careful with the paint-on version, the primary one they sell is waxed and may mess with paint adhesion.
looks like the wax free versions is called seal coat but i dont see it in a spray can. Guess they got rid of it in the past 2 years
Hey have you ever try Clear Laminate Peel and Stick Shelf Liner your contact paper? Thanks for making this video and cool signs.
Thank you for a short and super informative video!
Beautiful sign, technic, and tutorial.
Amazing what the human mind thinks and the things we come up with. Great freeken Vid, what bit did u use?
Thank u for a great video👍🏼
Very nice work ...What type of CNC are you using.
can you post your tools, feeds, and speeds, in your videos. Great job. I subscribed and liked.
cheers
Super informative video! What CNC machine did you use?
Awesome video and very easy to understand. One question though Shellac is not available in Greece. Any alternative!?
Really nice, thanks
Hi. Love the technique. Where can I get the sign clip art ?
Question if I wanted my wood to be black instead of the natural look would I have sprayed it before applying the vinyl
Can't thank you enough for this video!
thank you for sharing. after 3 years, it's still useful to someone like me. :) anyway, can I ask you what wood you used here? I read all your answers and really appreciate for sharing all.
Hello, I amJessica from China Danuo Machinery Equipment Co., LTD.
Our company's products include laser engraving machine, laser cutting machine, CNC Router and a series of ion cutting machines.
If you are interested, you can add my Whatsapp:+86-13285336692 mail:Jessica@danuomachinery.com
Great technique. How would you apply it with everything being the same but with a painted background instead of unfinished as you showed?
I would paint the workpiece, let it dry, then apply Ora mask and paint the carved areas before you remove the Ora mask.
Beautiful sign. Is there a site to check if brands are allowed to be copied?
So what if you had used some sort of finish, like lacquer, on the surface, let it dry, then put the masking on that.. Would the mask stick better, and help against bleeding underneath the edges?
So neat! Question - did you speed up your video during cutting or does it actually cut that fast?? If so, I need to learn more about speeds and feeds!
WOW!!!...Love the instruction in your videos. Would love to see a tutorial or two on sign making from start to finish...SUBBED!
Thanks- glad you liked it!
Great video and beautiful work!
If I paint the board first would I damage the paint once I take the vinyl off
thank you for showing your method. It's great to see how tos
it helps immensely! Thanks agin !
You're welcome Capt. Spiffy- glad it helped!
totrand great work you deserve alot more subscribers but eathier way thank you and great work on all videos
@@totrand awesome work. Big fan of you work. How long did you wait between adding paint and waiting for shellac to dry?
Wow really great technique, thanks.
excelent job¡¡¡¡¡ What is the brand of you CNC machine
Great tip with the vinyl!
hi sir, thx so much, i really apreciat this work, u can teach for us how to polish this wood to look very beautyful ? u watch some video of you channel and learned to use cnc fixed with corner bits, but its only it you use ? amazing job, thx for share sir.
Thanks for this video I always struggle when painting hoping your technique works for me
Hello sir, very nice video
Could u plz when ever u have time to list the final product which is the glossy finishing what did u use ? I bought the shellac from ur link , I’m just having problem in the end what to use to apply the final glossy look. Thank u
Hi Dan- I sprayed the signs with Rust Oleum Painter's Touch 2x clear coat- either gloss or satin. amzn.to/2HYgtlg (satin)
amzn.to/2ZPBJ7O (gloss)
Great tip. Have you done audiobooks before?
I considered trying audiobooks once, but never took action.
Great video, thanks for putting it together. Quick question, I wasn't aware you could paint over shellac. Or is the enamel spray paint OK for that?
You can paint over anything.
What router do you use in this video? And love the video. Using the vinyl is a great idea..
Thank you for the great video and how-to info. Can I ask you what fonts you found best to do this kind of work as well as the cutter bit you use too. The corner jig is a great idea as well. Great job!
Thanks Mark- glad you liked the video! I'm not sure that I've found any particular type of font family to be better than any other for V-carving. They all seem to work pretty well. Occasionally, I'll tweak (increase) the starting cut depth by 0.01 or 0.02 if a font naturally carves too shallow for my liking. Concerning the bit, I've been using an Onsrud 37-61. Wish I could claim credit for the offset jig- borrowed that idea from Shopbot.
Hallelujah
Priest singing at wedding
Really nice work, thanks for sharing!!!
I loved the video....extremely helpful. I love the look of the signs and was wondering what thickness you used for these?
Thanks, Kim. All of the signs were cut from 1x12s, so 3/4" thickness- give or take a 32nd ;)
Ideal solution. Thanks for sharing!
excellent thank you. could you please advise which software you used please?
Try using general finishes milk paint. It's thicker and means u can skip the shellac sealing.
Excellent video, thank you!
Hi totrand , Thanks for your video .Is this tape is special type ?
Are you referring to the blue tape, Rafiqul? If so, that is 3M Safe-Release Painter's Tape- Delicate Surfaces #2080EL-SR.
I've been using clear spray paint to seal the endgrain, it shrinks and lifts the vinyl. I noticed the shellac worked great, have you had a problem with it? I guess I am asking is it my technique (too much paint or?) or the chemistry of the solvent that damages the oracal vinyl. Thanks for the great video
I have been playing with this concept lately and I cannot get the smooth edges, the vinyl wrinkles and allows the paint to get under. What do you recommend to solve this?
Spray a clear lacquer first helps. Don't over saturate too fast/spray too close.
Hello, my name is benjamin from mexico. You can tell me, what a milling cutting use to this project, thank you
Absolutely beautiful! Thanks for posting!
Hi! Thanks for the great video! Do you know if oramask 813 would be appropriate for this or do you recommend sticking with the 631?Thanks much!
Sorry- I'm not familiar with 813. There are some reviews on amazon that seem to suggest issues with bubbles and poor adhesion. The 631 isn't the cheapest game in town, but it's always worked well for me.
That was pretty cool.
Thank you
I also us two coats of shellac on my red oak before adding the vinyl. Does adding the coat in the V carve help with paint bleeding? I do get some paint bleed that I can't sand out due to how deep it go.
I'm fairly certain that it does help, Matt. I think unless the wood fibers inside the v-carved area are sealed, paint can "wick" though them and appear just below the surface in the area that had been masked.
Thank you for the reply. I gave it a try and it turned out great! The only thing I noticed different was the paint didn't want to sit in some areas of the v-carve and it would just run from the away from it. I had to use a bush and dab the paint in that area. What type of paint are you using? Is it oil based or water?
Glad to hear it! I've had that happen, as well- just in an occasional, tiny area. My approach was also to dab it with a small artist brush- just as the paint was in the process of setting up a bit. I use only oil-based rattle cans- mostly Rustoleum Painters Touch 2x.
Wow this is owesom. Great idea. Thanks for the video.
Thanks Dino- Glad you liked it!
Wow your videos deserve a lot more views. Is that your voice? You speak like the guy on "How it's made".
Many thanks, AvengerDK! Yes, that's my voice. I was not familiar with "How it's made," series- Very cool.
Awesome work sir!
Very Cool Idea!!!! May I ask a question? Was your router filmed actual speed, or was the video speed increased?
Increased tho
Great job
Do more of these types of videos. You got a like and sub
I'm just starting out and was wondering, what type of CNC router machine are you using?
Steven Todd cnc shark is the one I use.
Thanks sooooo much for the technique!!!!
Man that’s freaking awesome, thank you for sharing
Thanks, that was great. Did you have any problems with the vinyl sticking to the shellac ?
Very good job!
How do you do the flat surfaces such as the shields in the other signs, that are carved in among the letters?
Hey man thanks for the video I am going to try your method I have been looking for good method of doing this as I have used high contact release paper, painters tape, masking tape, shelf liner, and usually resort to laser engraving my projects for clean painting lines but I noticed in your video you where not getting the vinyl to lift when cutting would you mind sharing your feeds and speeds that you used as well as the exact wood you used it looks like basic pine or douglas fur but I could be wrong thanks
You're welcome, ontheEdge. Looks like the carving was run at 12K RPM; 1.83 i.p.s. The wood is radiata (AKA Monterey) pine from Lowes / Home Depot- no knots, and nicer grain. I've never had a problem with Oracal 631 lifting, except one time when I had dust collection turned on.
wonderful. what cnc do you use?
I'm running a Shopbot Desktop 24x18 with the industrial spindle.
Great video!
Great work
Thanks, Leandro
buen video, lindo trabajo pero me gustraria saber como haces ese tipo de tipografia en madera, como la configuras para que escriba asi? se agradece el dato.
Hi what make and model is your machine? And what would be a good machine to start with? Thank you
Is that the normal speed of the CNC? If it is, can you give the name of the brand and model? Thanks! Subscribed!
Definitely NOT normal speed, Keyser!
How do you manage to get several colours next to each other? Like at 22 sek into the video, where you have a white "G" on a red shield with black borders...
Beautiful work btw!:)
Thanks Roger. Each element you mentioned is masked, cut / carved, shellacked, and painted separately. For example- the shield shape is cut out- either with a vinyl drag knife, or with a vbit (as a profile toolpath on the vector set to a depth of 1/32 inch). The vinyl is peeled, and area is shellacked, painted, and allowed to dry at least two days (as paint is on the surface). Next, a small piece of vinyl paint mask is applied over the shield area, and the letter "G" is carved. Shellac and paint are applied. Repeat for the ribbons and black border around the shield. Hope that makes sense.Part of the process: imgur.com/a/MKyJS
Aha, quite obvious when you know it (as with so many other things:)
Thanks a lot!
Excellent...
Thanks for sharing!
Absolutely Amazing
Thanks
Why apply shellac after engraving? Wouldn't paint adhere better to the raw wood?