paint for back of tank?

mph84

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What is the best kind of spray paint to paint the back of a tank with? I'm about to head to home depot to pick some up any good ideas?? looking for a good blue.

Thanks in advance,

Mike
 
Printers have sheets of sticky back that they can cut to exact measurements for you, kinda like applying a screen protector for I-phone....FYI.
 
I used Krylon. The only thing is Home Depot doesn't carry it anymore. You can it at Walmart though.

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Last time I was at HD they still had it. But if I did it again, I would try to go with the colored film like Ralph mentioned. But if you go paint, go light blue. :-) So much nicer than black.
 
yep the 210 I got had black and I wasn't a fan of the look. I've got blue on my 120 and like it a lot.
 
I have black on the back of my planted tank and blue on my reef tank. Both were painted with Krylon Fushion.
 
You're not painting inside the tank, so it doesn't really matter what brand you get.
 
glxtrix;814098 wrote: You're not painting inside the tank, so it doesn't really matter what brand you get.

I'd have to disagree. The paint that was on the back of the tank when I got it was starting to bubble up and peel off. I "believe" that there are paints that adhere better than others. The Krylon Fusion is advertised to adhere to glass w/o primer. May just be advertising but who knows. I'm sure there are plenty that will work though.
 
Bubbling means water got behind the paint. If you clean the glass right, paint will stick. Either way though, use what you want....but in my years of fish keeping, I've never had regular paint go bad on me. And blue is really nice looking on a tank too!
 
glxtrix;814112 wrote: Bubbling means water got behind the paint. If you clean the glass right, paint will stick. Either way though, use what you want....but in my years of fish keeping, I've never had regular paint go bad on me. And blue is really nice looking on a tank too!

you're probably right there. I know that cleaning properly is half the battle. Anyways thanks for the advice guys. And I'm with ya on the blue background! I'm really a fan of coralline on the back glass but I typically get impatient waiting on it, and I don't like black in the meantime.
 
I was at Wally World (Walmart) recently and in the school section they had some thick poster board for like 1.50. Bought a black piece and it looks great. Since it is thick it is not wavy like the thin pieces are. About the thickness of a cardboard box. 1 piece covered the back of my 60g. Even if you had to use 2 it should look fine.
 
There is a Youtube Video of a guy painting his tank. He used some craft paint from "Michael's" iirc. Then he used a smaller roller and rolled it on. I think he put more than one coat, but don't quote me on that. I would think rolling on paint would be the best plan of action...and I say that because...if your tank is full of water and you happen to scratch the glass for whatever reason, or water bubbles it up. How are you going to get a good flow of paint from a spray can with the tank backed up against a wall?
If you use a roller, you could probably roll paint back over the area that was scratched without moving your tank. Or at the very least...slide it out a couple of inches if possible.
Just my $.02, and I will be rolling paint on when I get ready to put mine in place. If it holds up better than spraying it on...I'm all for that.
 
If you don't want to spray, you can use Rustoleum oil based paint in a can. I used a mini roller and rolled on 2 coats. No peeling or scratching off after 7 years and I am around the back of my tank all the time (in wall setup with a fish room behind)
 
Darren24;814138 wrote: I was at Wally World (Walmart) recently and in the school section they had some thick poster board for like 1.50. Bought a black piece and it looks great. Since it is thick it is not wavy like the thin pieces are. About the thickness of a cardboard box. 1 piece covered the back of my 60g. Even if you had to use 2 it should look fine.

I use to do that with my fresh water tanks waaaaaaaay back in the day. I'd spray paint it black and then go over it with a blue at the bottom and gradate it up. Made a nice effect, and if I wanted to change it....I'd just respray whatever I wanted :up:
 
Prep is key. Acetone is the best, it leaves NO petroleum residue. Just be careful not to spill it...
If you roll it, be sure to allow proper drying time otherwise it will lift the first coat allowing bubbles.
 
Mike, sounds like you have your mind made-up for spray, so this isn't for you, but for anyone else who is reading along, who might be on the fence.

The poster-board idea is good for a while, but the first time you or a fish splashes water over the back, it's done (ask me how I know this)</em>. The only "paper-type" backgrounds that will endure are the coated ones you can buy in your LFSs. A lot of folks will tape these on, but there's another, cleaner way to do it. Try not to giggle...take some K-Y Jelly and squeeze a generous amount all over the back of your tank. Now apply the coated background and squeegee it smooth. Allow it to dry for a bit and it will stick there on it's own, without tape hanging around the edge of your tank. It forms somewhat of a seal and will not allow water to get between the glass and the background.

On thing to keep in mind, you can't just slide the tank out, like a couch or something to redo it, so you really need think through this.
 
J.B.;814170 wrote: Mike, sounds like you have your mind made-up for spray, so this isn't for you, but for anyone else who is reading along, who might be on the fence.

The poster-board idea is good for a while, but the first time you or a fish splashes water over the back, it's done (ask me how I know this)</em>. The only "paper-type" backgrounds that will endure are the coated ones you can buy in your LFSs. A lot of folks will tape these on, but there's another, cleaner way to do it. Try not to giggle...take some K-Y Jelly and squeeze a generous amount all over the back of your tank. Now apply the coated background and squeegee it smooth. Allow it to dry for a bit and it will stick there on it's own, without tape hanging around the edge of your tank. It forms somewhat of a seal and will not allow water to get between the glass and the background.

On thing to keep in mind, you can't just slide the tank out, like a couch or something to redo it, so you really need think through this.


I think most folks used to use olive oil to do the same thing. But i guess whatever you have laying around will work.

Edit: Rotfl btw!
 
mph84;814212 wrote: I think most folks used to use olive oil to do the same thing. But i guess whatever you have laying around will work.

Edit: Rotfl btw!

TMI IMO :lol2:Guess we know he does more than gawk at his fish tank while sitting in front of it.:lol2:Sorry...someone had too! He is retired military...so I'm pretty sure he will get a laugh.
 
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