Chrome Spray Paint
Chrome spray paint, like Krylon or Rustoleum, is relatively painless. Some
brands look better than others, but overall you can get a nice reflective
finish that is very slick. Unfortunately, as this is a spray paint,
you will have to go through extensive masking for any application to prevent
overspray, which takes forever and never works anyway. It also goes
on somewhat thick.
Some brands react strangely with certain toy plastics or modeling compounds
(i.e. Super Sculpey), because they are mostly enamel-based, and can remain
tacky and smudge. It is also difficult to paint any detailing over chrome
spray paint, because its slick surface doesn't allow other paints to stick.
To get around this, you have to mix the detailing paint with gesso
or some other type of medium.
Pros
Cons
· Cheap
· Masking is a pain
· Easy
(broad coverage)
·
Detailing is difficult
· Looks pretty good
· Even though
it looks good, you can still tell it's paint
Synopsis:
Use mainly for broad coverage or an entire figure, or you'll drive yourself
mad trying to mask off sections. Overall, looks pretty good if you recognize
its limitations. I used automotive Duplicolor Chrome Enamel Spray
Paint for my
Living Monolith
.