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yes you can afford it.. Depends what color and grain. Myself I like mahogany or
burl wood. Hardware store spray can of Red oxide primer usually rustoleum one
small can of flat black (not spray and all oil based) a few of those cheap acid brushes.
And a spray can of clear. Spray a practice piece first with the red primer. As soon as
you can handle the part its dry enought. Now thin the flat black (trial & error) so
the acid brush just makes scratch marks on a piece of paper cause acid brush is very
course your looking for scratches make these scratches keeping with the grain in mind. Depends on your preference sometimes you may want to smudge lightly with
ya thumb. Let all dry then a coat of clear more and more clear. The clear really needs a good drying - lightly sand or 000 steel wool and a finale coat of clear. The
art of painting is really studying wood grains with your eyes and embed that in your
mind and use the mind as a copy machine. My mother was an artist & all she told me
is to paint what you see..Just did my youngest boys Model A Even I am impressed...
Play with it and don't worry if it looks horrible no tree is perfect amazing clear coat
works wonders Then sometimes after the first process is maybe a fine mist of
red primer dry then more flat black scratch's that gives dimension then more clear..... you will be an expert in no time....as 19Fordy says