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I'm certain there's a dozen ways to skin this cat, but I've always waxed the inlays (tedious and exacting, to be sure) being careful to keep the wax only on the MOP. Then spray the black, let dry, remove the black from the inlays with a razor knife (it comes-off easily, sitting on the wax), clean the wax off real carefully with alcohol or lighter fluid and clear-coat the whole thing.
The devil's in the details.... get the wax only where you want it and nowhere you don't. Give everything time to dry between steps, and clean the MOP like you were gonna eat off it before clear-coating.
There's another way to do it using wax paper, masking tape, heat and whatnot, but it never settled in my brain deeply enough to recall the specifics... any experts know about that one?
just tapping the inlay can bring other problems like pulling an edge from being adhered down and lift an edge or a not so perfect edge with color is a difficult thing to clean up ,Id say Mike has it the wax is easier to remove even though I may have gone with carnauba wax applied carefully with a Q tip very thin layer just something to easily clean up after a top coat and VM and P to wash away the wax .this is just the way id try it ? tell us what your out come is Good Palm Sunday
Yes indeed... what FRANK said. Others may have done it successfully, but when I've tried taping-off the inlays, it tends to keep lifting on the edges and making a mess of things.
There's no real 'secret' to the waxing, as it simply makes the job of removing the unwanted color from the inlays a little easier. The real trick is careful application of the wax and equally careful removal of the paint with a narrow razor knife. A tedious job at best.
Still would like to hear from anyone who has used the procedure that involves waxed paper and a heat gun... whatever that may be.
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