A black matte coat

Have questions about the equipment used for macro- or micro- photography? Post those questions in this forum.

Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau

soldevilla
Posts: 684
Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2010 2:49 pm
Location: Barcelona, more or less

A black matte coat

Post by soldevilla »

I´ve found a really matte coat that is very usefull for to paint dark inside our adaptors. Plus, it dryed very quickly...

I bought a black matt nail polish brand Claire´s and the results are more dark that my best matte sample of paint.

seta666
Posts: 1071
Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2010 8:50 am
Location: Castellon, Spain

Re: A black matte coat

Post by seta666 »

soldevilla wrote:I´ve found a really matte coat that is very usefull for to paint dark inside our adaptors. Plus, it dryed very quickly...

I bought a black matt nail polish brand Claire´s and the results are more dark that my best matte sample of paint.
Interesting!! my main concern would be it peeling off and falling onto the sensor
Regards

Ancient1
Posts: 54
Joined: Sat Oct 23, 2010 11:10 am
Location: San Jose, California, USA

Post by Ancient1 »

Here is a review of black coatings for space applications, such as telescopes and other optical systems. Exhaustive work has been done to quantify the reflectance and durability of various coatings.

http://www.optics.arizona.edu/optomech/ ... 201999.pdf

My only question is whether these coatings are available in small quantities.

Here is a product that I have been using in optical systems for years, with good results. However, I do not have any quantitative data for its reflectance properties.

http://www.micro-tools.com/store/P-CF3- ... Ounce.aspx

Gene
Eugene Cisneros

g4lab
Posts: 1437
Joined: Fri May 23, 2008 11:07 am

Post by g4lab »

I would give it a little high temp bake too to make sure all the volatiles had been evaporated off.

Probably won't flake because it probably has flexiblizers added.

Nail polish is usually the same thing as brushing lacquer a word which in the modern world does not mean the same thing that it used to.

Flat black nail polish is probably very similar to good old fashioned Kodak Black Brushing Lacquer. I have two bottles of that and since I don't use much every ten years or so I add some reagent ethyl acetate to freshen them up.

BugEZ
Posts: 850
Joined: Sat Mar 26, 2011 7:15 pm
Location: Loves Park Illinois

Post by BugEZ »

About a year ago I needed to paint the shiny inside surfaces of an optical detector inside an aircraft engine vent line. The temperatrues can occasionally go up to about 400C (750F). The detector was for an engine development stand. We used a relatively inexpensive spray paint intended to paint the inside/outside of barbeque grills. My expectation was "better than shiny" but the results were quite good.

Here is a link to this spray paint.

http://www.krylon.com/products/bbq_stove_paints/

Keith

ChrisLilley
Posts: 674
Joined: Sat May 01, 2010 6:12 am
Location: Nice, France (I'm British)

Re: A black matte coat

Post by ChrisLilley »

soldevilla wrote: I bought a black matt nail polish brand Claire´s and the results are more dark that my best matte sample of paint.
One advantage of that, Claire's is a brand that is widespread in Europe and so available, while the micro-tools paint (and another spray paint that Charles Krebs recommended earlier) are not sold outside the US.

g4lab
Posts: 1437
Joined: Fri May 23, 2008 11:07 am

Post by g4lab »

Model makers have tiny bottles of enamels some of which have flat and matte surfaces which they use for painting models of war machinery.

http://www.testors.com/products/136003

http://www.testors.com/product/136012/1 ... _Spray_Can

http://www.testors.com/products/528102

http://www.testors.com/products/136204

http://www.testors.com/products/136839

ray_parkhurst
Posts: 3436
Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 10:40 am
Location: Santa Clara, CA, USA
Contact:

Re: A black matte coat

Post by ray_parkhurst »

soldevilla wrote:I´ve found a really matte coat that is very usefull for to paint dark inside our adaptors. Plus, it dryed very quickly...

I bought a black matt nail polish brand Claire´s and the results are more dark that my best matte sample of paint.
Great suggestion! I'd expect nail polish to be exceptionally durable as well given the intended application.

DQE
Posts: 1653
Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2008 1:33 pm
Location: near Portland, Maine, USA

Post by DQE »

A caveat, based on my possibly inadequate or incomplete experience:

I have found that many or perhaps most "flat" or "matte" black coatings have a significant specular reflectance. A better material, with its own issues and limitations, may be a velvet-like black flocking material. If you look inside many high-quality camera lenses and extension tubes, you may see such a material in use. For example, Canon's extension tubes use this, as shown in the link and thread below (scroll down about 3/4 of the page to see photos):

http://www.photomacrography.net/forum/v ... hp?t=16544

One would like to be sure that the fibers of any flocking material that is used would not flake off, of course. I've never noticed anything like that from my Canon extension tubes, so far, and they are about 6 years old.
-Phil

"Diffraction never sleeps"

Rylee Isitt
Posts: 476
Joined: Fri Apr 13, 2012 3:54 pm
Location: Canada
Contact:

Post by Rylee Isitt »

Any advice on what kind of paint to look out for if shopping at local arts and crafts stores? I've noticed that oil paints can be fairly matte, but flake and peel rather easily (I've used Testor brand paints, which really need to be sealed, and the sealant isn't very matte).

If it's possible to get black flocking, or perhaps black velvet material, it might be possible to glue it to the inside of adapters assuming that the reduced inner diameter wouldn't introduce vignetting.

Another possibility is the use of sand mixed with glue and paint. The roughness would probably reduce specular reflections. I used to play Dungeons and Dragons when I was a kid, and made my own terrain for table-top war gaming. I used to glue sand to pieces of styrofoam and then paint them so that the texture looked like gravel or grass. It seemed very, very sturdy and very matte, even with latex paints.

Peter De Smidt
Posts: 233
Joined: Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:10 am
Contact:

Post by Peter De Smidt »

Krylon Ultra Flat Black is quite good, although I've heard it's been discontinued.

Good flocking is readily available. See: http://www.protostar.biz/flock.htm

Chris S.
Site Admin
Posts: 4045
Joined: Sun Apr 05, 2009 9:55 pm
Location: Ohio, USA

Post by Chris S. »

For flocking, many of us use Protostar flocked light trap material. For me, this is an essential studio supply that I reach for constantly. It was developed for flocking the inside of telescope tubes, but works well in macro situations as well.

Regarding paint, the addition of talc as a dulling agent appears to be a long-standing practice--but it's something I haven't tried.

Edit: I see that Peter beat me to the mention of Protostar flocking. But it's worth mentioning twice.

Post Reply Previous topicNext topic