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Bezel Fading Technique

Soxxgo2

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2/2/15
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Phoenix, AZ
I wanted to share a good technique that I came up with for fading a bezel insert fairly quickly and most importantly, without removing the insert. It takes a little patience because it's not instant, but the results are pretty good.

I used 2000 grit sandpaper for this project. I thought it would make sense to cut the sandpaper into strips that were curved to the bezel shape and this turned out to work very well. As you can see in the first picture, I cut an approximately 1-1.5 cm section of sandpaper which has a slight curve on both sides. You want it to be about the width of the insert.

Initially, I tried using my finger to move the sandpaper back and forth, but this didn't work very well, as the paper kept slipping off my finger. Using tape is tedious and was leaving stick residue on the bezel after a couple passes.

The best way I found was to get a pensil (with a new eraser that is flat) and use that to apply the force to the sandpaper. Because it's 2000 grit, this will take some time. You'll have to cut new strips of sandpaper after about a minute of sanding, as it wears out real fast. I had to redo this process about 10 times to get the resuly you see here. It is very subtle, but that is exactly what I was going for. Most gens are not completely destroyed like some people like to recreate. The good examples have a slight fade from 40 years of sun damage and friction from cleaning and polishing.

It actually looks better in person. These pictures don't quite capture the fading as it really is.

Let me know what you think!

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gmg_3

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11/3/14
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looks great and perfect for a installed bezel...


i like a little more faint..
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Mendota

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I have a theory, and it isn't overnight. If you have a spare insert, the best way is to put it in a place where it will receive max sun exposure and just leave it there. If it sits there day in and day out, 24x7, it will get more direct sun in one day than wearing it outside for many days, since when you wear it you are moving around and it isn't just sitting in direct sun for 12 hours. Also, there probably isn't any wrist exposure in winter. I think the level of exposure just grows exponentially with each passing day. I think after 365 days of continuous sun exposure you would easily have the equivalent of 5-10 years of natural wrist exposure wearing the watch outside in summer.

It is just a theory. [emoji2] I don't have any spare inserts to test with, though.
 

Soxxgo2

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2/2/15
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Phoenix, AZ
I have a theory, and it isn't overnight. If you have a spare insert, the best way is to put it in a place where it will receive max sun exposure and just leave it there. If it sits there day in and day out, 24x7, it will get more direct sun in one day than wearing it outside for many days, since when you wear it you are moving around and it isn't just sitting in direct sun for 12 hours. Also, there probably isn't any wrist exposure in winter. I think the level of exposure just grows exponentially with each passing day. I think after 365 days of continuous sun exposure you would easily have the equivalent of 5-10 years of natural wrist exposure wearing the watch outside in summer.

It is just a theory. [emoji2] I don't have any spare inserts to test with, though.
I wish I had that kind of patience! It would be interesting to see though.

What about placing it just a few inches under a HID light, like say a 1000w metal halide for a few days. I wonder if that would do anything at all! My guess is it probably wouldn't. I'm not even sure the main factor in fading is UV light. It might just be breakdown from oxidation, cleaning repeatedly, natural occurring breakdown in the paint chemical structure, OR all of the above!

Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
 

kampachi

Renowned Member
7/1/14
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When it comes to fading, nothing beats thinner. I've faded alot of parts with thinner, be it on purpose or accidental...
 

stevedog

Getting To Know The Place
13/5/15
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I use this 3M polishing paper http://www.ottofrei.com/3M-WETORDRY-Polishing-Paper.html to polish out everyday wear micro scratches on cases and bracelets. You can fold the paper into whatever size needed.. it works great on those hard to hit areas. Takes about a half hour to make my SMP bracelet look sparkling new. I'm thinking the extra fine grit/micron papers would fade a bezel beautifully.
 

boostin20

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Soxx, that looks great. I will use this method in the future if I want to leave a stock bezel insert in a watch.
 

Soxxgo2

Renowned Member
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2/2/15
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Phoenix, AZ
I use this 3M polishing paper http://www.ottofrei.com/3M-WETORDRY-Polishing-Paper.html to polish out everyday wear micro scratches on cases and bracelets. You can fold the paper into whatever size needed.. it works great on those hard to hit areas. Takes about a half hour to make my SMP bracelet look sparkling new. I'm thinking the extra fine grit/micron papers would fade a bezel beautifully.
Thanks for the link. Looks like a great source for polishing materials etc.
 

R2L

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This is a great technique to use as it keeps the underside of the insert looking close to new. The easiest tell of an insert that has been bleached is to look at the backside; it will be faded too. Fading of gen inserts over time does not change the color of the underside, just of the topside! This is why on TRF or VRM, when they are selling faded inserts, they will also show you the underside. Great suggestion!
 

Soxxgo2

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Phoenix, AZ
This is a great technique to use as it keeps the underside of the insert looking close to new. The easiest tell of an insert that has been bleached is to look at the backside; it will be faded too. Fading of gen inserts over time does not change the color of the underside, just of the topside! This is why on TRF or VRM, when they are selling faded inserts, they will also show you the underside. Great suggestion!
You make a good point. That's something I hadn't even considered. If you're real anal about making a rep gen-like, this may help a tiny bit.
 

reptile1003

Getting To Know The Place
24/6/15
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what grit do you use on bracelets ?
and to fade the bezel inserts?
thank you in advance....
 

Soxxgo2

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what grit do you use on bracelets ?
and to fade the bezel inserts?
thank you in advance....
I haven't done a bracelet but I'm thinking 1000 grit to do sharp edges. I used 2000 on my bezel but it took a very long time. I would probably try 1500 and see how that works.
 

reptile1003

Getting To Know The Place
24/6/15
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I haven't done a bracelet but I'm thinking 1000 grit to do sharp edges. I used 2000 on my bezel but it took a very long time. I would probably try 1500 and see how that works.
Thanks.

Sent from my SM-N900P using Tapatalk
 

tanweekiat

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26/3/12
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172fa20d6b282ddf3f175dd7327d1060.jpg


Got my Pepsi GMT today and used your method of fading the bezel... Also, did vintage the markers...

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Looks pretty good to me
 

tanweekiat

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Add on, I replaced the crystal with Clarks. The crystal that came with it is hilarious!

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