Does anybody know how to remove night adder or storm riders arm tattoos, without having to repaint the parts?
I've heard eraser removes logos and such from Joes. I've never tried it before, but I asked over at HT a year or so back, and that's what they told me.
They also said it could ruin the gloss on the figure as well. Leaving a mark that you can see it was altered. Someone suggested that the rubbing your finger on it right after could diminish the effect. Something about the oils in your skin or something.
I'm sure someone more experience can come in here and verify or give better (seasoned) advice.
I don't think there's any non-chemical means of stripping it without marring the surrounding flesh.
Thanks guys I will try that.I've removed Resolute SE's ninja tat with a small bit of lacquer thinner on a q-tip. A VERY small bit. And then make sure that you wipe it all up with a dry q-tip.
I don't follow. The skin is molded in that dark brown plastic, so you shouldn't need to match any paint up.
I don't follow. The skin is molded in that dark brown plastic, so you shouldn't need to match any paint up.
You would have to paint-match if you can't polish the affected plastic. Chemicals like lacquer thinner make the plastic dull, removes shine.
I also boil the figure I want to remove paint from. Hot paint is weaker it seems or its because the plastic is more flexible or the hot water aids in removal. not sure why it is but paint seems to come off way easier when it is hot.
When lacquer thinner and a q-tip don't get into tight crevices, I actually carve the paint out with an X-acto knife.
When lacquer thinner and a q-tip don't get into tight crevices, I actually carve the paint out with an X-acto knife.
use a toothpic my friend..
Toothpicks are far too fat and blunt for the tight crevices that require a sharp metal tool.
a blade will just cut. scarape, and and make the subject unatural.
I've used denatured alcohol. You can find it in the paint section in Wal-Mart.
It won't melt the plastic like acetone. It will leave a slight foggy spot, but I usually just rub the figure with natural oils from your skin afterwards. If rubbing it with your hands won't work, you may need to add just a little oil from your face. Sounds gross, but that usually fixes it for me. If it grosses you out, you can always wash the figure later, but for some reason, this is some weird fix that I've found that works, and it's cheap.
I think Storm Rider's tats are on top of painted flesh, though. So that'd take off the factory flesh paint down to the underlying black plastic.
Certain colors come off much easier than others. Usually black tattoos come off pretty easily from the Hasbro factory flesh plastic.