I want to dye a vintage caucasian Mego head light blue, but am a little nervous to try it. Has anyone else attempted this? Any advice? Thanks!
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Dying caucasian Mego heads-anyone try it?
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You'll probably end up with olive green. If it was white, as in paper white, it would go blue.Expectation is the death of discovery. -
Along the same lines, how about dying an original Mego body? Any tricks? I recently tried to dye a Mego Zira body black and after more than 12 hours in the dye, what came out was a variety of colours. Red to brown to black. Epic fail. She looked like a patchwork quilt. And some parts didn't take the dye at all. Any suggestions other than dye? I tried Testors ename on the forearms and hands. The hands came out fine but the paint rubs right off the forearms.Comment
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The vinyl heads will dye well, BUT, only within the warmer color range.
The vinyl pigment has an orangey/pink base to make the flesh color.
Any dye you add to the orange base will still have to work well within that range...
Bright orange, red, brown, rust and Black, and Sinestro hot pink.
Cooler colors..( blue, green, and blueish purple) fall within the range of color opposits, to the flesh tone pigments.
The dye is transparent, so it won't cover the host color, only lay a film of the new color over it.
If you dye a flesh head with a cooler color, (Green or Blue) the color opposition of the base tone will create a brownish, slime green, or a blackish dark blue.
The new color will be to dark to register the new tint effectively.
Purple will work only if it falls into the redder color range.
The classic Mego zombie heads turned bluish gray because the orange pigment used wasn't UV stable over time, so the orange bleached out leaving the trace elements of blue pigment used to brown the orange into a proper flesh tone.
If you have a Zombie head like Megocrazy said, it WILL go to Blue or Green, because the orange has faded out.
You can also turn zombie heads back to normal really quickly and easily by giving them quick dips into orang RIT dye and rinsing between dips to check against a flesh head.
Keep dipping and rinsing till the color is back to normal.
Hope this helps.
Just as a side note, I'm a senior artist at Walt Disney and we use pigmented products for animatronic figures, and character Icon sculpts that I do there.
We use a substantial database as to pigment systems, including vinyl tinting systems.
Thats where I learned about the UV unstable vinyl pigments used in the late 70s.
We had a lot of things turning funky colors from the same time period.Chris
Keepin' it Mego-ey !Comment
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That's really interesting info, Shellhead. So in your opinion, the Mego "zombie heads" were due to a bad batch of pigment rather than a bad batch of vinyl, which is what I always thought? Based on personal experience, UV is definitely the culprit, but I always assumed it was causing a reaction with the vinyl, not the dye, so this is very interesting to learn. I'll have to try that orange RIT dye trick you mention. That sounds much easier than the plasti dip method. Is there a certain shade of orange that is best to use?Last edited by cjefferys; Jun 17, '12, 10:15 PM.Comment
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UPDATE: I bought a pack of navy blue Rit and boiled it on the stove. I then used a "trial victim," namely an old, beat-up Mego Spock head. The results were not impressive: Spock is now a purplish-black, not navy blue. Oh well. Guess I'll have to use the vinyl car-paint that others have recommended. Regardless, thanks once again for all the help, folks!Type Two: The Mego body, not the disease.Comment
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I have done a number of dye jobs to zombied out heads, along with other toys and customs.
I would note that I have had heads return to a zombie state, and have also had other vinyl die jobs fade or go back to their original color. I would suspect that RIT may not be all that UV stable, or that it continues to 'soak in' well after the dip job. Also worth noting that harder plastics like the pvc used for classic stormtrooper bodies seem to hold the color just fine.
I may try to find a UV coating and see if that effects a RIT dip fix for a zombie head and helps the color to stay.
That's really interesting info, Shellhead. So in your opinion, the Mego "zombie heads" were due to a bad batch of pigment rather than a bad batch of vinyl, which is what I always thought? Based on personal experience, UV is definitely the culprit, but I always assumed it was causing a reaction with the vinyl, not the dye, so this is very interesting to learn. I'll have to try that orange RIT dye trick you mention. That sounds much easier than the plasti dip method. Is there a certain shade of orange that is best to use?Comment
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