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  1. Wooden Toy Car, Hot Rod Freaky Ford, 27 T Coupe, MDF, Lavender

    I painted this toy car with a coat of rattle can automotive primer, Behr Oops house paint from Home Depot and a top coat of Rust-Oleum Triple Thick Glaze. I found the Rust-Oleum, Triple Thick Glaze difficult to apply and had to sand and respray it way to many times. However, if you want a glossy...
  2. Wooden Toy Car, Hot Rod, 32 Ford Sedan, Green

    It might not look green on you monitor but its green in daylight. The body is MDF primed with automotive primer because I had it and needed to get rid of it. The primer was old but it worked well the cans were another story. The green paint is Behr Oops paint from Home Depot applied with an...
  3. Handmade Wooden Toy Car, Hot Rod Freaky Ford, 27 Ford T Coupe, Orange and Black Halloween Colors

    I made the body from glued up 3/4 inch thick MDF. I used up some automotive primer I had left over from another project to seal the MDF. The orange paint is Behr house paint applied with an airbrush. The top coat is Rust-Oleum Triple Thick Glaze. The glaze is so glossy that you can get a finish...
  4. Wooden Toy Car, Hot Rod, 32 Ford Sedan, Green, Version 2 Flat

    This version is pretty much the same as my previously posted green 32 Ford Sedan. The big difference is the top coat. This one has Krylon Crystal Clear Acrylic Flat sprayed as the last coat. There is a very big diffrence inthe the way they look but in a photo I have to look very hard to tel...
  5. Wood & Lumber
    Question 1: For the purposes of making occasional patio tables, If I cut cedar lumber into smaller pieces (I need to do that eventually anyway) will they dry faster? And/or will they be more inclined not to warp or check because of being smaller, shorter? I'm in an area of higher humidity...
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