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Posted

Hi friends,

Anyone try spraying oil dyes onto leather with a spray bottle before (like the one pictured)? I would love to hear your experience. I don't have the money to buy an airbrush and do not know if I would use it much any way and thought of this as an alternative.

Spray_Bottle.jpg

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Posted

Hi friends,

Anyone try spraying oil dyes onto leather with a spray bottle before (like the one pictured)? I would love to hear your experience. I don't have the money to buy an airbrush and do not know if I would use it much any way and thought of this as an alternative.

Never tried a spray bottle like that. I don't know if you can get "Prevail Sprayers" where you are, but they are cheap, and use small cans of air as propellant. They work pretty well for smaller projects.

  • Ambassador
Posted

Won't work..... not enought pressure. Try the Previal Sprayers, they will work fine,

great for Large areas , Belts & Bilfolds

Luke

  • Members
Posted

Hi Luke,

I had been wondering about using a Previal Sprayer and thanks for answering one of my questions. The other one being- Do you have to thin the dye before spraying? I have not tried doing it yet, because I have some water based poly in my Previal sprayer jar. I need to buy more jars.

Thanks again,

Fred

Won't work..... not enought pressure. Try the Previal Sprayers, they will work fine,

great for Large areas , Belts & Bilfolds

  • Ambassador
Posted

Most of the time i do not thin the dye. if i want a light shade of the color i will thin. look under the heading of Knife sheaths. thoes were sprayed.

Luke

  • Members
Posted

Hi friends,

Anyone try spraying oil dyes onto leather with a spray bottle before (like the one pictured)? I would love to hear your experience. I don't have the money to buy an airbrush and do not know if I would use it much any way and thought of this as an alternative.

The little spray thing may work but it would be difficult to get an even covering with it. You can get cheap single action airbrushes at Bunnings and Hobby shops that are about $15.00 that run on compressed air cans which would be our eqivalent to the preval sprayer. I'm not sure if Bunnings sell the air cans anymore though, the airbrushes are normally kept in the tool section.

Clair

  • Members
Posted (edited)

Luke,

Thanks for the reply!

I will go look at the knife sheaths next.

Regards,

Fred

PS The sheaths are beautiful.

Most of the time i do not thin the dye. if i want a light shade of the color i will thin. look under the heading of Knife sheaths. thoes were sprayed.

Edited by Pelallito
  • Members
Posted

You can get cheap single action airbrushes at Bunnings and Hobby shops that are about $15.00 that run on compressed air cans which would be our eqivalent to the preval sprayer. I'm not sure if Bunnings sell the air cans anymore though, the airbrushes are normally kept in the tool section.

I agree, I've used both the Preval sprayers and the single-action sprayers with cans of propellant. The single-action sprayer is more reliable than the aerosol type sprayer used by the Preval system. And the cans of propellant used with the Preval are actually quite expensive compared to the propellants you use with a single-action sprayer, when you consider the actual quantities you're getting. Another nice thing about the single-action sprayer is, you can also hook it up to a compressor when you finally get tired of buying all those cans of propellant.

Kate

  • Members
Posted

Kate,

I will look at the single action airbrushes. I just repaired my little air compressor.

Thanks for the suggestions from everybody.

Regards,

Fred

I agree, I've used both the Preval sprayers and the single-action sprayers with cans of propellant. The single-action sprayer is more reliable than the aerosol type sprayer used by the Preval system. And the cans of propellant used with the Preval are actually quite expensive compared to the propellants you use with a single-action sprayer, when you consider the actual quantities you're getting. Another nice thing about the single-action sprayer is, you can also hook it up to a compressor when you finally get tired of buying all those cans of propellant.

Kate

  • Members
Posted

Fred, if your compressor is fixed and your thinking of an air brush then look at the double action type....much better control to get the "faded" look when needed and not much difference in price. And you can just puff air with no dye to help dry the layers quicker too! :P

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