Hi everyone, I ordered my DIY laptop yesterday. I'm excited that it should be here soon. I'm not a huge fan of the normal aluminum color, so I'm considering painting it. It really can't be that hard, considering you can take the entire thing apart. I'm considering airbrushing it-- I was considering wrapping it with some 3M vinyl, but I feel like that doesn't fully accomplish what I'm trying to do.

now you need to prep your laptop to be painted.


 mask around the laptop and any parts you don't want painted such as lights


 once that's done, wipe over the laptop to make sure it's a clean surface without grease or finger prints, I used a screen wipe but you could use a wipe from a fast food place.


 you will need somewhere to spray I use a cardboard box with one end cut off which works really well.


 to start the background mix up the main color you want to use, mine is plain white, I mixed up normal acrylic with a little water to make it almost the consistency of milk then put it in the airbrush.


 I sprayed just inside the edge as I wanted to create a faded effect to the black.


 then i used the hair dryer to dry the paint before i start the next layer


 I then added a little yellow to the original mix of white paint, then sprayed that on the white making it deliberately patchy, the color was only slight almost magnolia.


 hair dryer again before doing the next layer


 I then added more yellow and again sprayed it deliberately patchy.


 hair dryer again to dry the background.


 and that's my basic background done.


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Now I add the background details, I've been watching a ton of Dexter so I wanted a kind of blood cast off theme so I mixed up some red with a little brown to create the blood color, added a little water to make it the consistency of blood, so thicker than before.


 at this point you might want to practice on a piece of paper


 using a small brush i flicked paint over the laptop to create cast off patterns, using different amounts of paint on the brush created different effects so it's worth practicing first,


 then I painted a thick layer on to my hand making sure it was a little patchy then placed my hand a couple of times on to the laptop


 then used the hair dryer to dry the blood effect


 now it's time for the stencil, take a piece of paper and fold it alternate ways this will make sure the stencil can be picked up once it's been coated with spray mount.


 at this stage make sure you cover everything with newspaper, spray mount is really sticky.


 put your stencil on the folded paper then spray it with a light coat of spray mount


 place it carefully on the laptop making sure that all the detailed bits stick


 stick paper round the edges so you don't spray bits you don't want to


 i used black car paint for this bit mainly due to laziness on my part, I sprayed a decent coat at about 20cm distance.


 I wanted a few minutes for the paint to be touch dry then carefully removed the stencil


 Now we have the design and the paint is dry on the stencil design it's time to protect it with a lot of coats of Lacquer without it the design will just scratch off.


 using a clear Lacquer, i used car Lacquer, spray a light coat at a distance of about 20cm


 use the hair dryer to dry the Lacquer, this will Bake it on there just like they do when they spray cars professionally


 now all you have to do is repeat these 2 steps about 10 times, and I'm not kidding here, the more the better you want a nice thick coat as this will be the only protection of the design.


 once you done the last coat you need to leave it for at least 24 hours to make sure the Lacquer is properly cured.


 and thats it, all done, remove the masking tape and its ready to use.

thanks, appreciate the compliment, It i spent a week or 2 thinking about the design before i even picked up the airbrush.


I got the whole project done in one day, other than the 24 hours to cure the lacquer.


I'm thinking about painting the rest of it but im not sure how i want to do it, i would prefer not to take it appart as laptops are fiddly to put back together again afterwards.

Hey I know this is kind of a strange question but I have a brand new HP Envy Sleekbook and the top lid as been covered in white paint. Apparently while I was out maintenance came into my apartment to paint. They used a sprayer instead of a brush and didn't throw a tarp over any of my stuff. End result is a once nice silver laptop now looks like a chalky white mess. Any ideas how to remove paint and not damage the original surface underneath?? Would appreciate any advice.

A brand new HP ENVY Sleekbook? Well since it is new, check your laptop if it still has a Warranty in it, go into HP Support Assistant or to this site: =us&lc=en , The thing is, I don't know if they'll accept maintenance or not. Hope this info helps you!

I have not had this particular problem with paint on a plastic laptop, but I have sucessfully removed paint from other things with (believe it or not) WD40.... I would try some on a corner or edge to see if this will work for you without changing the surface of laptop finish.

I was wondering if there are any good ways of "filling" them and make it look new? I highly doubt that, as I'd have to replicate the paint job perfectly. If not that, will this just be a case of covering it with stickers or something? Thanks.

The way that top looks you could coat it in something like plastidip and if the bottom is in good shape you could then buy a skin for the laptop to match the top so they whole thing would be reskinned. Just a thought.

Soooooooooooooo.... I needed a new laptop, and a found a guy selling one on LetGo for super cheap. (The model is HP 15 Flyer Red 15-f272wm). The laptop seems brand new, and everything is perfect. No scratches, no hardware/software issues, and at a fraction of what the original price was. However, the only downside to this, is that it's RED. Like, loud, in your face, red. Unfortunately, this is the one color I just cannot stand, at all. With all that said, I have 3 questions.

I recently made a big jump when it comes to laptop specs. My old laptop was a 2015~ mid-range and my new one is a slightly high-tier 2021 laptop. I downloaded paint.net (non-ms store version), moved my plugins and filetypes from my old laptop to my new one, and put them in their respective folders.

However, I've noticed just how long paint.net takes to load in comparison to my old laptop. My old one would load the app within 2-3 seconds at any given time, while my new laptop takes around 8-10 seconds on the first 1-2 times that I open it, and then it's mostly fine afterwards.

I was thinking of painting my laptop palmrest which is silver. Was thinking of putting black spray paint with a cut out military pattern that would shield the rest of the surface (something like from the movie hackers iirc). The palmrest has a black base with a kind of sand silver surface. The problem is that I've no idea which kind of paint would be a good choice. I do game a lot on it and the palmrest can get quite warm so the paint would have to endure that. Since the keyboard is backlit (white backlight) I suppose there is no transparent paint that would be able to cover the keys but pass through the light in case I need it?

I was thinking of painting my laptop palmrest which is silver. Was thinking of putting black spray paint with a cut out military pattern that would shield the rest of the surface (something like from the movie hackers I suppose). The palmrest has a black base with a kind of sand silver surface. The problem is that I've no idea which kind of paint would be a good choice. I do game a lot on it and the palmrest can get quite warm so the paint would have to endure that. Since the keyboard is backlit (white backlight) I suppose there is no transparent paint that would be able to cover the keys but pass through the light in case I need it?

If this happens, let the paint dry until you can touch it without it smearing and then sand the area smooth with the sanding sponge. Then reaply your topcoat. I suggest that you let your laptop dry for a few hours before peeling the tape off.

Man I can totally feel you. I have asus laptop too, and it's not that old, in fact it's been for only 1 year. But it doesn't have the best specs per se, and it kind of average. And CSP still massively lag in it. I've asked the same thing on this forum before, and concluded the best way is to save money to get better hardware and going back to using SAI since it's lag free, and i like it so much and comfortable with it. It's not free, but you can get it free, iykwim, i don't recommend it tho. Also, there's medibang that's similar to CSP except that it's totally free, but it's just a bit less heavier than CSP.

I've been struggling along with Clip Studio on my creaky old Asus laptop for far too long now. It's okay when working on simple pieces with few layers, but whenever I want to attempt anything more ambitious (or, basically, any comic page) it chugs along so slowly.

Weird...before my new laptop(that is now 2 yrs old) I was using CSP on an old laptop and never had any issues. It was actually Photoshop that was murdering my laptop's performance; when I ran CSP I could do that and still have other things running as well(music, streaming, internet)- couldn't do that when I was using Photoshop...I could only listen to music that I downloaded(and sometimes that wouldn't work). 2351a5e196

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