You do realize you just asked us if your personal preference is ok to have in your own home, right? It's equivalent to asking us if it is ok for you to have a white refrigerator or brown couch. Of course it is ok to have whatever color you prefer on your own things in your own home, including on your pool table light. Not only is it ok, yours and your wife's opinions are the only ones that matter in the least.i recently bought a gold crown pool table light such as this one:
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Would it be sacrilege to sand and paint it to match the aprons on my GC1? Curious what the consensus might be.
I know, I know. I'm just asking the collective in case someone has any compelling arguments against or for it that I have not considered. another reason is I'm torn between keeping the wood grain and painting to match the vintage aesthetic. looking for peoples' opinionsYou do realize you just asked us if your personal preference is ok to have in your own home, right? It's equivalent to asking us if it is ok for you to have a white refrigerator or brown couch. Of course it is ok to have whatever color you prefer on your own things in your own home, including on your pool table light. Not only is it ok, yours and your wife's opinions are the only ones that matter in the least.
I wouldn't personally ever cover up beautiful wood grain with paint, but that's just my preference which only matters for the things I own.
One thing I would mention in case you hadn't thought of it, if the aprons on your table are white, which means you would be painting the light white, it might look kind of funny next to the Brunswick logo insert on the light since that logo insert has a white background as well.
thanks for this tip, the flat panels had caught my eye but I am not as familiar with how they are installed vs LED tube replacements. Are they simply dropped into the frame? would i be able to remove the entire fluorescent fixture (weight)?I'd do it if I had a solid color GC. Those lights are all 20+ years old now. Switch them over to LED flat panels while you are there. But keep the grates, or your eyes will be blinded.
Another idea is to just cover it in vinyl furniture wrap in the color that best matches your table (shop around for the best match, there are a billion colors out there, and you can even have a custom color done if desired).I know, I know. I'm just asking the collective in case someone has any compelling arguments against or for it that I have not considered. another reason is I'm torn between keeping the wood grain and painting to match the vintage aesthetic. looking for peoples' opinions
While I did not paint an original, I did make my own and painted it to match my restored Gold Crown I. If you do decide to paint, use a Door and Trim or Cabinet Urethane Enamel as it will offer a better finish and dry harder than latex wall paint.i recently bought a gold crown pool table light such as this one:
View attachment 854618
Would it be sacrilege to sand and paint it to match the aprons on my GC1? Curious what the consensus might be.
This light-frame.... is it stained with a clear coat just like your wood aprons?i recently bought a gold crown pool table light such as this one:
View attachment 854618
Would it be sacrilege to sand and paint it to match the aprons on my GC1? Curious what the consensus might be.
That paint job pops!!While I did not paint an original, I did make my own and painted it to match my restored Gold Crown I. If you do decide to paint, use a Door and Trim or Cabinet Urethane Enamel as it will offer a better finish and dry harder than latex wall paint.
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The wood shop near me told me that my GCI aprons were Maple.This light-frame.... is it stained with a clear coat just like your wood aprons?
I know my GCI apron (pic) layered wood was gorgeous.
Likely not poplar. With a fine grit, all aprons and underframe took 45 minutes to completely strip, a 200 or 180 grit then stain/clear coat.
my aprons have the original paint on them but the backside looks much like yours. the light itself is solid mahogany if i am not mistakenThis light-frame.... is it stained with a clear coat just like your wood aprons?
I know my GCI apron (pic) layered wood was gorgeous.
Likely not poplar. With a fine grit, all aprons and underframe took 45 minutes to completely strip, a 200 or 180 grit then stain/clear coat.
I miss typed in thread #10, I was told they were poplar.... Kinda makes sense, the wood was so light, had my choice of how dark to go to match the room, I did get it tho too light.The wood shop near me told me that my GCI aprons were Maple.
I believe it is. I'm not sure I'd paint mahogany, but that's just me. I made mine out of poplar.my aprons have the original paint on them but the backside looks much like yours. the light itself is solid mahogany if i am not mistaken
I believe it is. I'm not sure I'd paint mahogany, but that's just me. I made mine out of poplar.
I owned 7 GC I's and some II"s. Cornblasted em (not too deep) light hand sanding, took 15 minutes to do that. Wiped em clean five minutes, chose a stain, then 3 coats of clear. Came out perfect, got the wood to match the room lighting.Yeah, I'd be hard pressed to paint mahogany.
I'm a huge believer in automotive paint for this kind of stuff. Summit Racing has great paint at reasonable cost of you don't have your heart set on a color match.