• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Testing some tags

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Huaco

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2011
Messages
1,361
Reaction score
155
Location
Just south of Cow Town
I found a bunch of old ID tags... flipped them over and used a stamp die to print the words. I tried to color the depressions with dry-erase marker and it did not come off. I tried another area with "sharpie and then wiped some hand sanitizer on it and the sharpie came right off... go figure!

IMAG0794.jpg
 
Alcohol will remove sharpie. Hand sanitizer is made with alcohol and gel so it will evaporate.
Looks good!

Old school fonts when they are stamped like that.
 
Yeah, I thought I had some iso alcohol here but did not. I was just surprised the dry erase did not come off. Good thing these were just test tags.
I plan to label a control panel with these. For small things like pump switches I plan to put "Pump 1" "Pump 2" on the same tag. I will fasten them to the control panel with aluminum rivets. I have some heavy duty stainless rivets but that would be OVERKILL!
 
If you are trying to keep the letters colored and not the face, I have two ideas:

  1. use a lab marker,
  2. use some enamel paint and a squeegee, or
  3. oxidize the metal (depending on type) with heat or some other oxidizer.

Once dry, you could then hit the face with a high-grit sand paper on a hard sanding block. This should remove the face and leave the letters.
 
If you are trying to keep the letters colored and not the face, I have two ideas:

  1. use a lab marker,
  2. use some enamel paint and a squeegee, or
  3. oxidize the metal (depending on type) with heat or some other oxidizer.

Once dry, you could then hit the face with a high-grit sand paper on a hard sanding block. This should remove the face and leave the letters.

Thanks for the reply.
I used to do something similar with wheels on model cars when I was a kid. I will probably end up getting a Testors black enamel and fill the letters and wipe them down with paint thinner to clean the aluminum off that way. I like the way the black letters stand out on the aluminum plate.
 
Thanks for the reply.
I used to do something similar with wheels on model cars when I was a kid. I will probably end up getting a Testors black enamel and fill the letters and wipe them down with paint thinner to clean the aluminum off that way. I like the way the black letters stand out on the aluminum plate.

Enamel paint should work well, and it comes in many colors. You could also use a fine tip syringe to apply the paint in smaller amounts, and really "push" it into the stamp. Then a quick squeegee and most will be off the face.

I like how red contrasts on aluminum, black would be my second choice.
monogram_letter_n_vertical_cardholders.jpg


:mug:
 
When I worked in an engraving shop as a younger man we used an acid base solution to oxidize brass, and I think aluminum, to create discoloration in the lettering.

Can't recall the name of the stuff we used or the concentration.
 
When I worked in an engraving shop as a younger man we used an acid base solution to oxidize brass, and I think aluminum, to create discoloration in the lettering.

Can't recall the name of the stuff we used or the concentration.

Would be interesting to see if I can find anything out about it. Would you just buff off the top surface with sanding block?
 
That is NICE! What do you typically use for a squeegee?

3M Scotchcal squeegee

I have some gold ones, and they are pretty stiff. Not sure about the blue one's flexibility, and I think the orange is a holder or really soft (not sure either). Never used it for this type of application, but based on other use they should work pretty good.
 
Back
Top