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Proud to be a child of God, a faithful son (I hope lol) a trying to be hardworking student, a part-time worker, a nerf/milsim enthusiast, a crafting and music lover and an awesome friend. to you :) Hope you have an enjoyable time reading about my life, as much as I have fun living it! |
Minimalist
I am a university student who loves chocolate! Coffee is my best buddy when it comes to taking on my finals. I have a tendency to want to try and do so many different things at once and as a result, I've found my hobbies to be as such!
Nerfing is one of them, but aside from that, I also love arts and craft. I have my own startup, Thumbforlego at: where I sell my works!
I love to do all sorts of crafting, so you will see me uploading posts of my leathercrafts, thumbdrives, replica guns, nerf gun modifications and gundam models! I'm fortunate enough to be blessed by really supportive parents and given the chance to explore many, many parts of the world and try out a plethora of activities. This is also how I discovered my love for film photography, videography and piano.
The film photo above is unedited! My family loves cold countries xD. We managed to catch the northern lights twice!
I've also gotten the chance to experience many of nature's wonders
And my most freezing experience to date: riding a husky ski sled into the sunset (It was -38 to -40 degrees celsius and the huskies were pretty fast.)
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Why 36000feetabove? This is the altitude that commercial planes cruise at and I have always loved the view up in the sky, being amongst the sea of clouds. :) Personally, my favourite favourite food has got to be airplane buns! Does anyone else feel the same way?! With a slice of butter and looking out of the window, I have yet to find an experience that can beat that.
After tomorrow, before today
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Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Spraying my GoPro skeleton housing came as quite a sudden thing, at least half of it. I bought the hero 3 skeleton housing upon reading up that it is compatible with a Hero 4. Currently GoPro sells a blackout housing (yay!) and a skeleton housing (yay!)
but they do not have a blackout skeleton housing, so i just spray painted one. I decided to give it a bit of a camo feel to it due to my helmet cover being mostly green in colour. This post is on how i sprayed that casing, although i think i might get another casing if i want another pattern. On to the how to segment!
Step 1: Masking
As always, mask away the areas that you do NOT want to be painted. Using painter's tape is very much recommended. Places you will want to mask are the lens cover, display cover, unless you don't need the display, and all of the holes on the skeleton housing. This is to keep the internals of the housing clean, free from paint. buttons are optional. Also, make sure that as you cover the holes, the tape does not have any gaps and it does not overlap the inner sides if not you are left with a very inconsistent paintwork. For the lens cover, i pasted the painter's tape over and used my knife to rim around the edges to get that rounded edge. For my preference, I very much prefer to have the display there, but the led lights covered. Hence the partial masking of the front display screen.
Step 2: Spray Painting
The golden rule of time is always, ALWAYS go for many light coats over one think layer of paint. Thin coats will make the surface look less "thick" than doing a one layer coat at one shot and so far, from what i've experienced, many layers adhere better to the surface and the paints dont chip off as easily. As in, in the event that you drop it, not so much of the original surface shows through when the paint chips off. Although over time, wear and tear, it will eventually be worn off at the edges.
This step has many layers and steps to follow, depending on how you want the outcome to be like. If its a simple green, just a few thin coats of olive green and you are good to go! Instead, for mine, i used these paints in this order.
First coat is a simple spray over all the areas to cover the whole thing with a base layer of dark green. Spray it all over making sure you cover the edges especially. Spray the back too so that it is consistent all around!
Second is black marbling. I did this by first testing it out at the side of the newspapers and practiced spraying it before doing it on the actual product as sometimes the black lines can appear too close to each other, losing that effect. It also depends a lot on how you move your hand.
Once you are more confident, then go ahead with doing it on your item! in this case, the housing. you will want to use your finger to lightly tap on the streaks of paint if they are spiderwebbed stuck to your item so that it sticks to the surface instead of just hanging in mid-air.
Third was olive green which is a lighter shade of green as i wanted to create some “depth” in the cover. I sprayed from far so that the little specks of light green can settle on the surface, instead of spraying it directly and having a thick obvious coat of light green. This gave some form of depth, although it was later dulled as i sprayed matte black from far, letting the specks of matt black though it also.
Step 3: Clear Coating
This step is about protecting the paint by spraying a layer of clear coat over to protect it. It’s also the spraying of this coat to matte the surface. I could have used a glossy finishing also, depending on preference.
I could have done better if i used proper stencils and swapped the spraying sequence a base coat of light green, gone it over with camo of dark green, then black marbling and clear coat to top it off.
Step 4: Removing the painters tape:
This step just involves removing all the parts that you have painted. Do a test fit of everything to make sure it all works just fine. Be careful to not scratch off the paint! Make sure the lens cover os absolutely clean as your GoPro will be recording from there.
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