Reserector_
Chief Petty Officer" & 2021 Splash of the Year Win
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2019
- Messages
- 609
All of the above, plus try to consolidate your small batch work as much as possible. Get a bunch of it staged for resin so you can keep on rolling, or at least not have long delays between batches.
Brushes can simply be dropped into a covered container of acetone and then "banged out" and wiped on a rag before starting back to using them.
If you clean them thoroughly and stand them with their bristles up, they can dry that way and still be used another day.
Don't try to soak the rollers in acetone, unless you take the cover off the frame to do it. The solvent will pool inside if you do, and then leak out to wreck your work.
Might be practical if you had a tall skinny container that a roller could fit in, and not need allot of solvent to submerge it. Roller cleaning requires a "spinner" that flings the paint (or resin) and solvent out of them.
A spinner will spin a brush, also.
Brushes can simply be dropped into a covered container of acetone and then "banged out" and wiped on a rag before starting back to using them.
If you clean them thoroughly and stand them with their bristles up, they can dry that way and still be used another day.
Don't try to soak the rollers in acetone, unless you take the cover off the frame to do it. The solvent will pool inside if you do, and then leak out to wreck your work.
Might be practical if you had a tall skinny container that a roller could fit in, and not need allot of solvent to submerge it. Roller cleaning requires a "spinner" that flings the paint (or resin) and solvent out of them.
A spinner will spin a brush, also.