PLEASE HELP!: Paint remover and plastic

4 Replies, 5817 Views

I'm on the verge of tears and writing this with 5 minutes before I have to go to bed. We tried a new paint pen from Michael's today to paint Bill and Ben's running boards white/grey, and it bled through the tape a little, and when I was trying to scratch it away, it turned out that it had dried super fast, and removing it removes the paint underneath too, and now there's a huge area on the right side of Bill or Ben, don't know which, but thank God it's only one of them, and it's now pretty much ruined if there's no solution to removing the paint from the paint pen. The brand is Craft Smart, and it's a fine-point white paint pen. Mom will certainly never buy me a new one of this, if we can even find one. I'd really like a solution by tomorrow, or please, please let there be a solution that would work no matter how long the paint's been on..
Creator of upcoming series "Sudrian Tales"
Amateur voice actor
Still haven't painted FFF's Daisy lol sorry my guy (i promise I'll get that airbrush kit soon)
I never use tape I just try to be super careful, most solvents used to remove paint will melt the plastic.
I think we all have had these type of disappointments when customizing our toys when we were young. The experiences are what eventually makes us into better modelers as we grow older.

If you just used regular masking tape (tan) then that could be the problem as the inexpensive stuff never was meant for crisp detail lines. The important thing to know is not to rely on the tape so much where you are painting and stay away from slathering it on. You still need to take your time and try to follow the edges without loading it up with a lot paint. The other thing that I have found is that paint pens often gob too much paint on. I have tons of pens and use them for specific areas but would not use them on larger areas or where they come in contact with tape because of the lack of flow control. Using a brush with light coats might have had better results. The better way may have been to disassemble the train, mask off all areas not to be painted, use a smooth piece of flat plastic, ice cream stick or toothpick to smooth out the edges of the masking tape to help the pressure sensitive glue to adhere to your project. Then use a spray paint in several very light coats. Of course the optimum way is to use an Airbrush but not everyone has access to one. I only use this tape (no copy cats) in the 1" size for modeling as the edge adhesion is great, peels off easy without pulling paint off underneath and leaves no glue residue, its also soft and pliable. One roll should last you into your adult life. http://www.scotchblue.com/wps/portal/3M/...207&rt=rud Get the one with the gold lettering on it and not their regular, plain, blue painters tape.

To repair what you have, could you now just use a small brush a color paint similar to where the bleed through occurred and touch up the troubled area?
(07-14-2016, 12:15 PM)Super Wrote: I think we all have had these type of disappointments when customizing our toys when we were young. The experiences are what eventually makes us into better modelers as we grow older.

If you just used regular masking tape (tan) then that could be the problem as the inexpensive stuff never was meant for crisp detail lines. The important thing to know is not to rely on the tape so much where you are painting and stay away from slathering it on. You still need to take your time and try to follow the edges without loading it up with a lot paint. The other thing that I have found is that paint pens often gob too much paint on. I have tons of pens and use them for specific areas but would not use them on larger areas or where they come in contact with tape because of the lack of flow control. Using a brush with light coats might have had better results. The better way may have been to disassemble the train, mask off all areas not to be painted, use a smooth piece of flat plastic, ice cream stick or toothpick to smooth out the edges of the masking tape to help the pressure sensitive glue to adhere to your project. Then use a spray paint in several very light coats. Of course the optimum way is to use an Airbrush but not everyone has access to one. I only use this tape (no copy cats) in the 1" size for modeling as the edge adhesion is great, peels off easy without pulling paint off underneath and leaves no glue residue, its also soft and pliable. One roll should last you into your adult life. http://www.scotchblue.com/wps/portal/3M/...207&rt=rud Get the one with the gold lettering on it and not their regular, plain, blue painters tape.

To repair what you have, could you now just use a small brush a color paint similar to where the bleed through occurred and touch up the troubled area?

I understand I need to take my time, and I did use Scotch Blue tape. I'm not as troubled now, but still quite upset, since my grandma used nail polish remover and it worked pretty well, but there's still a sort of fog and scratches of white left over, and she accidentally chipped more red off of the buffer beam corners. I don't think any of my reds will match the sort of almost-transparent pinkish dark red that Trackmaster running boards have. You may argue that no one would tell the difference, but I can tell the smallest differences in colors, and it'll bother me to no end.
Creator of upcoming series "Sudrian Tales"
Amateur voice actor
Still haven't painted FFF's Daisy lol sorry my guy (i promise I'll get that airbrush kit soon)
I think the green tape for painting the wall works the best.



Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)