The artwork I used is a piece called Tribal Eagle by *xx-trigrhappy-xx and is used with permission.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1: What you need (and where you can get it in the UK)
Brass plate (I got mine from eBay)
Iron
Computer to prepare artwork
Laser printer and laser OHP acetate (Or do what I did and get a print shop to photocopy it onto acetate for you)
Permanent OHP marker (useful for touching up the mask before etching)
Insulating (PVC) tape (Woolworths/Robert Dyas or hardware stores)
Masking tape (ditto)
Scissors
Non-metal kitchen scourer pad
Kitchen towel
Acetone (optional - but useful. Nail polish remover is mostly acetone and will do nicely)
(Hydrated) ferric chloride crystals ( Maplin)
Fine Wet & Dry paper (Wilkinson or hardware stores)
Some form of sanding block (I just used a scrap bit of wood I had lying around)
Cheap tupperware (You're not going to be able to reuse this for food!)
Rubber gloves (absolutely essential)
Goggles (essential if you're not stupid - don't risk your eyesight doing something like this!)
Dust mask (optional if you're careful and do the painting outdoors - there's not much painting involved)
Spray paint (I used black enamel satin-finish stuff from Wilkinson)
Superglue











































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




I like it! congrats, i think i will try it.
nice work,
well any solution to etch on the plastic surface??
waiting
shi
Is it worth it? or is it much easier using a laser printer?
(sorry for the separate reply) :P
As far as quality of image goes, I think doing a portrait will be difficult - the image produced is pretty monochrome (i.e. pure black and white) rather than greyscale. You might be able to do something like dithering, but I would imagine getting a decent looking portrait out would be difficult.
Thomas
http://www.instructables.com/id/Stop-using-Ferric-Chloride-etchant!--A-better-etc/
I used the solution detailed in that article to etch over 100 brass medallions. I was able to etch between 10-15 1.25" brass circles with a batch that was 4 cups hydrogen peroxide and 2 cups muriatic acid before I had to mix a new batch. The etching took about 45 minutes to etch to a depth of about 1/32" and was relatively non toxic.
I used a small (5 gallon) plastic fish tank with a light-weight fish tank air pump to do the etching in and keep the solution agitiated.
I have been etching (PCBs) myself with ferric chloride solution.
However I am getting concerned if this is the best choice for chemicals.
Maybe we should take a look the alternatives we have around.
Take a look at this http://www.instructables.com/id/Stop-using-Ferric-Chloride-etchant!--A-better-etc/
Another solution would be this one
I am not sure what to choose.
Does anyone around have more information about this?
Tks
I have a question, would you be up to sell me one? I would like that have one glued on my EEE =-)