Making A Solid Wood Sign with Resin Infill // How-To Builds
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 พ.ค. 2019
- Today Michael makes a solid oak outdoor sign for our new neighbors in town, carved on our X-Carve CNC Router, with a logo and name done as a resin infill!
Materials Used:
White Oak Flooring
Titebond 2 Wood Glue
Titebond 3 Wood Glue
Total Boat 2:1 Epoxy, Medium Hardener
Activated Charcoal Power
Eye Candy Pigment, Baku Red
Syringes
Tools Used:
Bessey 31 Inch Parallel Clamps
Supermax 19-38 Drum Sander
Dewault 20v Jigsaw
X-Carve CNC Router
Dewault 20v Hammer Drill Combo
The sign came out so awesome! Now I'm craving noodles!
Goodness that turned out great! Thanks for sharing....
Beautiful sign. I would be afraid someone would steal it. When I was a teen there was a country store that had a beautiful sign. It got stolen and returned numerous times. Wish the owners good luck with their new business.
Great job 🙌🌹✌️
Use red acrylic ink. That will give you that fire engine red....you should also be using a sealer before pouring the resin. This will keep it from leeching into the wood.
I second the sealer prior to epoxy
I ate at snack noodle a couple months ago, was amazing, try the shu mai.
0:46 “And then I slipped the tongue…in.”
What color is the red pigment that you used? Everything I have gotten is more of a maroon color.
I wonder if you could use powder coating powder to color the epoxy? What do you think?
It would definitely be worth a test-pour first but I bet that it would work. Resin is so versatile in terms of what can be used to color it
It’s been sometime since you’ve hung the sign, how did the varnish hold up to the sunlight and weather?
I like this question a lot; so far so good. Down the road if it every did need a re-vamp because it is a solid wood with the infill all it would take was a sand, and re-coat. think I might post an updated photo over on our instagram later this week to show how it is lasting because its hanging right up the street from us.
@@MakersWorkshopLLC Michael, what did you seal it with? many resin don't do well with UV light exposure and need special coating to protect them. Can you update how well the sign has held up against the weather? Also what is the depth you carve to on the CNC for resin pour. Thanks Gaz
What type varnish did you use for this sign?
I won't tell you.
Beautiful, what kind of wood is that
Oak
Maple
What is the router machine setup called
How much can you charge for somthing like this?
@@MakersWorkshopLLC Wow. That's a nice chunk of change. Only thing that sucks is I dont have current u insurance to hang signage. I dont really want to hang signs and install them but wonder if their is a market for making them only
@@MakersWorkshopLLC Great idea
$50
Type 2 titebond is not for outdoor, type 3 is
which is why he used titebond 3