You may be able to get a better shape from that brush by trimming not only the width, but trimming the length so it’s stubby like a blunt toothpick but still can wick some paint. Just a thought...
Picked up some Christmasy $5s on eBay for cheap but the hot stamps were worn off. Ultra fine tip gold paint pen works pretty good if the stamp grooves are still there and you have a steady hand. I’m not sure how well it will work on the smaller print on the back but for the denomination side it’s ok.
Picked up some Christmasy $5s on eBay for cheap but the hot stamps were worn off. Ultra fine tip gold paint pen works pretty good if the stamp grooves are still there and you have a steady hand. I’m not sure how well it will work on the smaller print on the back but for the denomination side it’s ok.
While that may be a gold marker, tends to look darker, like a bronze with a patina. Maybe it’s just the lighting.
That paint that @BamaT8ter is using seems “brighter” or more reflective.
Picked up some Christmasy $5s on eBay for cheap but the hot stamps were worn off. Ultra fine tip gold paint pen works pretty good if the stamp grooves are still there and you have a steady hand. I’m not sure how well it will work on the smaller print on the back but for the denomination side it’s ok.
You guys need a glue pen that small, put the glue in the grooves, then brush on some gold leaf, it only sticks to the glue, brush off the residue, viola!
While that may be a gold marker, tends to look darker, like a bronze with a patina. Maybe it’s just the lighting.
That paint that @BamaT8ter is using seems “brighter” or more reflective.
Picked up some Christmasy $5s on eBay for cheap but the hot stamps were worn off. Ultra fine tip gold paint pen works pretty good if the stamp grooves are still there and you have a steady hand. I’m not sure how well it will work on the smaller print on the back but for the denomination side it’s ok.