Arnie,
The secret is to have someone else hold the stamp :-)

On Fri, Apr 11, 2014, at 03:33 PM, [1][email protected] wrote:

  Too much acetone! Moisten paper towel patch and give a quick wipe in
  direction I gave.

I have written to a friend for the name of the waxy nail hole filler.
Did a search and could not find the info. to help you.

It's not the weight of the hammer alone!

You must be able to swing the hammer and strike hard!

I have access to a 10 pound sledge hammer but can't swing it while
holding the stamp!

  then wiping basically the whole shootin’ match off with the acetone
  leaving a bit of color all over the back of the iron head.


-----Original Message-----
From: John Muir <[email protected]>
To: ShopTalk <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, Apr 11, 2014 3:25 pm
Subject: Re: ShopTalk: Paint fill for irons

Not to give you hammer envy, Arnie, but mine is a 4 pounder. lol. I’m
globbing the testors paint around the stamping, letting it dry, then
wiping basically the whole shootin’ match off with the acetone leaving
a bit of color all over the back of the iron head.
John
On Apr 11, 2014, at 4:31 PM, [2][email protected] wrote:


  You must make your stampings deeper! Use a heavy hammer (mine is a 3
  pound "drill hammer") strike the stamp ONLY ONCE and HARD! The
  "paint sticks" you are looking for are used to fill small nail holes
  as in picture frame making. You rub the stamping with the waxy paint
  stick and wipe with a dry paper towel (no solvent) the stamp must
  still be deep.

Check craft stores for the paint sticks.
Also when you do your current wipe use  less acetone, less pressure and
rub across the stamped line so as to not remove the paint in the
stamping.

-----Original Message-----
From: John Muir <[3][email protected]>
To: ShopTalk <[4][email protected]>
Sent: Fri, Apr 11, 2014 1:18 pm
Subject: ShopTalk: Paint fill for irons

Golfworks (and maybe Golfsmith?) used to sell paint sticks to fill iron
stampings that were more like a crayon than acrylic paint sticks they
sell now.
I’m stamping/ paint filling some wedges and the acrylic paint tends to
want to disappear when I try and clean up the area around the stamping
with acetone.
Any ideas?

John Muir
[5]clubmaker-online.com
810.923.7396


By the way, I send out weekly information  on new golf equipment called
The Clubmaker Report. Would you like me to add your email to it? Send
me a quick note if yes.

Thanks!
John Muir
[6]clubmaker-online.com
810.923.7396

References

1. mailto:[email protected]
2. mailto:[email protected]
3. mailto:[email protected]
4. mailto:[email protected]
5. http://clubmaker-online.com/
6. http://clubmaker-online.com/

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