LegendOfSpeed said:it's a print on something (i don't know exactly what) but then it is put on an eta datewheel...
sconehead said:I've read several threads on the forums regarding datwheels with printed overlays over the original fonts. I've glued a noob sub overlay over a an ordinary eta datewheel with no problems using gs-hypo cement. So if it's a viable proposition that's been used before its worth a try. I was thinking of using the thinnest photo paper I can find and reducing the scanned image to the exact dimensions of the datewheel, the hardest part will be cutting the overlay correctly...
Reduce the scan to approx. 33% then adjust by trial and error...takashi said:i have seen photo paper 130g. That will shave it to half... anyway, care to share the size on how to print? Thanks a lot.
sconehead said:The overlay must be as thin as possible so as not to jam with the underside of the dial. The paper 'tester' overlay works fine but for a really gen effect I'm hoping the thinnest glossy photo paper will suffice. Believe it or not the hardest part up to now has been cutting out the overlay correctly!!! If I get the overlay idea to work I'll post a high res scan of the datewheel to scale and with the correct grey coloured font so that all members can simply print some off, if they wish, for free...