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Age lume dots?


Whatever123

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Hi there,

I have a vintage Rolex with a nicely aged bezel insert. Still the dial looks like new (apart from the lume color). I wonder how you can achieve that washed-out tritium look on the lume dots - is there any way without reluming it? If you would for instance put a tiny drop of thinner or cleaning solvent on the lume dots... I haven't tried yet, I'm a coward... ;)

Any ideas?

Thanks!

Whatever123

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Model 'weathering powder' brushes on with a micro brush or cotton bud and comes in lots of different shades. If you don't like the effect it wipes off with a damp bud.

Sounds interesting. Have you tried that yourself? Pics? ;)

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  • 4 months later...

I know this is an old topic, i was searching topics on reluming and where to get luminizing kits here in asia, when

I came across this topic.

About the weathering or getting that vintage look on the lume dots, something came to mind...

I'm in to scale models and painting miniatures. Check out the Citadel paints for Warhammer, they have paints

that give that washed/used/aged/vintage effect. They look like lume/luminizing tints actually, but they give that

weathered color.

Cheaper alternative that also came to mind... Use tea... Hot or Iced... It might work, used to do that on paper,

make it look medieval/old manuscript...

:)

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