In this video, I will show you how I painted this Savage Model 64. Materials you'll need is Camo Paint from Rustoleum, Acetone, Microfibers, Painters tape, a Tissue, long freshly cut grass, leaves, and some creativity.
I agree. - theres a ole boy out of NC that painted his 22 that comes close to this . both are fantastic. I get everyone likes different patterns but in the grand scheme of things this job and ( nate bonebusta ) set the bar pretty dang high on the camo job. Turned out pretty good . yup she sure did.
@@Rotarymilitia I take it Rust-Oleum Specialty Camouflage Spray Army Green is more of the Grayish/Greyish (Urban Green) since it's lighter & the Rust-Oleum Specialty Camouflage Spray Deep Forest Green is more of OD (Olive Drab) Green since it's darker?
Out of all the Rifle paint jobs I've seen on You Tube, I truly believe yours looks the best.👍 I'm into Air Rifles and the first thing I do before painting is, I sand it using a #400 grit sand paper. Then I clean it with Acetone or Denatured Alcohol , once it's painted and dried thoroughly, I seal it with a Matte Clear.
Expertly done! I've seen a lot of DIY camo jobs on RU-vid, but your technique is by far the most superior. You used myriad of items easily found and varying styles. I'm absolutely going to try and duplicate your method. I'd imagine in the field, this thing is invisible. Great Job and thank you!
Great job brother, good video and it turned out great. The thing that impressed me the most though is the fact that you did it for your kid, those are the kind of things that make a huge impact in a positive way in a child’s life and they will never forget it👍
Definitely using your order of colors you have great style, I'm guessing you have some serious artistic skills, other people's stuff doesn't look as good as yours and seems more complicated
Recently purchased a 64F takedown, and was thinking, man, I'd love to paint this thing in a camo pattern. 😆 GREAT step by step how to on this... I'm going to try it. Thanks!
Try a dark brown for the netting step instead of black. You'll like it. Try a few strands of brighter green for some grass, just a few and lighter brown for a few twigs. Blends in anywhere but snow. :)
That's a nice looking camo job. I used the same paint on mine, but I did a Swedish M90 style camo pattern using jagged, precut pieces of painter's tape. It turned out ok, but I like the natural leaf pattern better. I may redo mine similar to this.
It's the best I've seen. I'll do it that way on my next rifle, but I'll use a brown with the khaki. I have more dead leaves and pine needs in my area. Nice leaf pattern man..
Mate outta the 100's of videos i've watched this iss by far the best video i've seen yet... it seems very esy nd cheap to do compared to others...THANKU
That by no means turned out pretty good that turned out to be beautiful a work of art great job you may get people sending in their weapons to you to camouflage them and ship them back might be something worth advertising again great job
Everybody else starts with khaki base and they have to do a lot more blending to get a decent end result. The natural materials used as stencils are the opposite of how normal stencils work and would have an inverse color. If you understand what I mean. I'm about to paint my 2 hunting bows and will start with a base that more resembles the dominant colors of vegetation during fall/winter hunting season and then come in with lighter/darker colors for depth. Makes more sense to me. Good job on thinking outside the box, we need more of that. Nice results.
I like the army green base coat. I don’t live in the desert and so many of the videos out there must be veterans coming back from Iraq because they all seem to paint the base coat tan.
This kind of stuff is the beauty of cheap guns, they are great for plinking but cheap enough that you are willing to risk messing it up in order to personalize it...great job by the way