Black Light Tips Posted by TygerMin on Jan 03, 2015
I picked up a feather fur yesterday:
When checking out how another piece of fabric looked under blacklight, I noticed this with the fur:
I love that look! I am going with an owl inspired monster, Borsa body probably different head. Any tips on what to use to obtain a "normal" look in regular light that would look good under the blacklight? More specificaly, yellow paint for eyes and nose color.
When checking out how another piece of fabric looked under blacklight, I noticed this with the fur:
I love that look! I am going with an owl inspired monster, Borsa body probably different head. Any tips on what to use to obtain a "normal" look in regular light that would look good under the blacklight? More specificaly, yellow paint for eyes and nose color.
Re: Black Light Tips Posted by Shawn on Jan 03, 2015
It's a monster... wouldn't about anything look normal? White for the teeth is going to look fine under both normal and UV light.
Re: Black Light Tips Posted by TygerMin on Jan 04, 2015
True, one of the reasons I am focusing on monsters! :D But, not sure I want too many pastels on this:
Don't want to stick to just white (though it would look cool in UV!).
Don't want to stick to just white (though it would look cool in UV!).
Re: Black Light Tips Posted by Chris Arveson on Jan 04, 2015
There are invisible clear blacklight paints that dry clear but react in different colors under blacklight. They aren't cheap, though.
Here's a Google search for the Wildfire brand.
Here's a Google search for the Wildfire brand.
Re: Black Light Tips Posted by TygerMin on Jan 04, 2015
Wow! Those are pricey. Love the concept though, and not a bad idea for some backdrops.
Re: Black Light Tips Posted by Chris Arveson on Jan 04, 2015
Yeah, I was shocked when I saw the prices. It's the kind of thing that if you knew you were going to need it for ten different projects, you might go for it. Certainly not for just one, however.
Loading
No More Post
Error
Loading