Close
Results 1 to 10 of 11

Threaded View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Newbie, or Trading Post Troll
    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    Arvada
    Posts
    12

    Default Spray painting an AR-15!

    A while back, I had a whim to change one of my rifles from a plain black gun, to something colorful. I thought about Cerakote, but frankly, didn't want to pay that much for it - plus, I was on the fence about having a permanent change. Then I thought, why not spray paint? Sure, it's kind of crude, and will wear, but A) it's cheap, and B) it's removable, and C) if you mess it up, you can just try again. I went to the Internet and Youtube to find out how to do it. The Garand Thumb channel has a pretty good tutorial, which I more or less followed exactly.

    I went to Walmart and bought 4 cans of Rustoleum from their camouflage line. They are specifically designed for camouflage purposes - natural colors, ultra flat finish. The colors I got are Earth Brown, Khaki, Forest Green (dark OD), and Army Green (a lighter, almost avocado color). I didn't get the black camo, since true black is not really a color that appears in nature, plus, why put black on a black rifle?

    My first test was on a 20" AR-15 I had put together - a Bravo Company upper and Aero Precision lower. Chopped down carry handle sight, with an Aimpoint PRO. I thought to go with a woodland theme, so I used Forest Green and Dark Brown. I taped up all of the parts I didn't want painted - mostly the small moving parts like the trigger, mag release, etc. ALWAYS double, triple, quadruple check before you start spraying!

    First, I put down some diagonal stripes of Forest Green. I was tempted to just leave it as it was. Yeah, I'm aware of the bad oil leak - I was deployed to Iraq for nearly a year, my wife had a friend as a temporary roommate. Her car was a POS, and she was a crap roommate too, so that friendship is pretty much dead.



    But again, black is an unnatural color...so I continued, filling in the gaps with brown.


    After that, I decided to add a micro texture as well. From a distance, the brown and green stripes should help it blend, but as you get closer, the large stripes get more defined. So, I used an old mesh laundry bag. I would overlay the bag over one color, and give it a quick close sweep with the opposite. Brown micro texture on the green, and vice versa.


    The final product looked a LOT better than I anticipated.


    So now, 4 of my guns are painted, and I'm probably going to do an AK next, maybe in a traditional tiger stripe if I'm feeling ambitious.

    From top to bottom: Ruger Precison Rifle 308 with a Bushnell DMR-2 - brown, khaki. Ruger PC Carbine - khaki, forest green. Bravo Company lower, Noveske upper with MRO, Surefire and BE Meyers MAWL - khaki, brown. The 20" Aero AR I just described.



    This was seriously a ton of fun, and I look forward to experimenting with new colors and patterns as the old ones wear off.

    Anyone else have a home grown rattle can job they want to share? I'm always open to inspiration!
    Last edited by rocketman; 05-01-2018 at 12:35. Reason: Resizing thumbnails

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •