Greetings Friends,
I just wanted to share with you a significant discovery I recently made with respects to restoring crisp lines and lettering on a playfield. I am currently restoring a Bally 1969 "Bowl-O" and I have done some major repainting of the playfield artwork. I knew that at some point I was going to need to redo some lines and lettering on the game and I also knew that mine is not the steadiest hand for doing either; masking with tape helps you in doing large areas and long lines, but have you tried doing this with detail? Trust me, my first restoration was tediously painting each individual line for a hand of cards by masking the edges... not fun!
I gave it some thought, and remembered that growing up as a kid, before everyone was putting a laser printer in their home for under $100.00, the closest "joe ordinary" on the street came to being able to do laser quality with printing on projects, etc, was with a system of transfers. These you could buy from your local newsagent and they came on a transparent plastic film. The idea was you place the sheet matching up the letter you wanted with the spot you wanted it on your paper, and using a pencil, you would rub over the letter. Pull the sheet away, and voila! A crips clear letter (took a whole night to do a heading!). some of you remember these I am sure. I havent seen them since leaving school, I think it was around 1856... feels like that anyway!
So I said to myself "self, if these are still available today, you may be onto something"... I was, it was too much caffein! But the following day I went to around half a dozen newsagents, most of them knew what I was talking about, but hadnt seen these for years. I went to one more newsagent and this guy took me to the back of the shop, opened a draw, and there they were. He had them in storage for almost fifteen years, nobody was asking for them anymore. I bought a pack from him, took it home and gave it a try [PLEASE SEE TEST BOARD PICTURE BELOW]. As I usually do, I took a piece of scrap wood. painted it with some paint that I will be using on the game, did some lines with paint, free hand; and then some using the characters from the transfer (these are the '%' signs on the test board). Now the real test, if the clear top-coat did not lift the transfers OR 'fry' them, then I had a breakthrough!
You can see the sample board survived the test, YES! I have included a shot of the actual playfield; look at the bowling score card; the border and every line you see is laid using these transfers. The numbers on the pins are also from the transfers. I went back to the shop and cleaned the guy out of every pack of every font he had for 20c per pack, BARGAIN! Now it would be cruel of me to post this and be the only man in existence with this product. So, the internet came to the rescue. THE COMPANY IS ALIVE AND WELL AND YOU CAN ORDER ONLINE!!! The link is here:
http://www.decadry.com/En/default.aspI am a little while away from clearcoating the actual playfield but if the test is anything to go by, then there wont be a problem. I will let you know how it goes when the time comes.
I hope this helps you guys. Sorry for the long post, but c'mon, it was in interesting read, right? This will be out in paperback soon....
Thanks Guys... and Gals... (do we have any Gals here???)