Lighting Windows without lighting them?

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joey_d1119
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Lighting Windows without lighting them?

Post by joey_d1119 »

Hello,
Im building the "All Good Things" Enterprise D. There are two resin pieces that have windows, but the pieces are solid resin. What can I put on the windows that will reflect light coming from the warp engines and the lighted windows on the plastic parts of the model, that will give the illusion that the windows on the resin piece are illuminated. I was thinking of using a silver pen to fill in the winows, but Im hoping you all have something better in mind.
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Zen-Builder
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Post by Zen-Builder »

Here is what I would try.

Paint the windows either white or a metallic colour(silver might be a bit strong) and than fill the recesses if any with acrylic gel or a similar medium.

The Gel will simulate the window pane and the colour behind it reflect the light.

Try it on a scrap piece.
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TER-OR
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Post by TER-OR »

White looks better than silver - white tinted with a bit of yellow looks really good. Cover with good clearcoat.

Or, look for some reflective material like Scotch-lite. I keep meaning to go to a sign shop and get some scraps.
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joey_d1119
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Post by joey_d1119 »

where can i pick up some scotch lite?
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Post by en'til Zog »

One trick would be to paint ALL the windows with fluorescent paint - paint that glows with 'black light' shines on it. Then shine 'black light' on it!

Scotchlight? Go to an automotive supply shop and look for reflective tape. It's a pebbly lookig white(ish) tape used for marking off warning areas or 'reflectorizing' car bits. By 3M, probably. Wally World often has it.
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Post by TER-OR »

Yeah, it's a 3M product. Sign shops use all colors of it for reflective signs. Also seen on shoes, jackets, etc. for night-time visibility.

They may have scraps you could snag. I keep meaning to try this myself. Zog's right though - you will find it in stores as reflector tape.
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Terry Miesle
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joey_d1119
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Post by joey_d1119 »

I just bought some for real cheap on ebay!
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Post by irishtrek »

There's always glow in the dark paints.
Normal?? What is normal??
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Pat Amaral
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Post by Pat Amaral »

irishtrek wrote:There's always glow in the dark paints.
That's like...

philosophical.


Almost...


metaphysical
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Post by irishtrek »

Nere heard metaphisycal before.
Normal?? What is normal??
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kinooruen
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Post by kinooruen »

I've had some success with acrylic pearlescent white mixed with transparent colors. The pearl's got a bit more life to it than plain white. Aluminum Plate (buffing) Metallizer with a transparent over coat also works.
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