Flexiglow UV Reactive Neon Paint
VL is running a review of (no I'm not kidding) UV Reflective Paint for whatever sort of artistic case design aspirations you might have. Various colors and some bad photos make me kind of wonder about the whole thing, but perhaps others have more informed thoughts...
Painting up a keyboard would be great for a (particularly goth) club DJ's PC - both in looks and functionality.
from Clearneon?
Is it just that clearneon sprays on and this has to be applied by the applicator?
Disconnect and self-destruct, one bullet at a time.
Note that you can see some pretty interesting "pre-painted" gear directly at the company's website.
I'm not terribly familiar with the latest in case-modding, so I have to ask - are these UV lights entirely safe for longterm exposure? Say, 16 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year?
--Ryv
did you know that (at least here in germany) it's actually forbidden to use computers which don't have a complete metal cover? it's because of the radio interference, I believe.
See pictures of tits
Interestingly, they sell clear versions of this paint for use on license plates. They apparently make your plate illegible to Traffic Camera's.
Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
When I saw the heading "UV-reflective paint", my first thought was "Oh Wow!!! Paintings for Bees!!"
Bees see into the ultraviolet, and many quite plain looking flowers have quite garish patterns in their UV reflectance so the bees can easily see them and home in on the nectar.
But this is just fluorescent paint. Colour me unimpressed.
There is a professional company called Wildfire that makes UV lights and paints for stage and theater (think Mr Toads wild ride @ Disney).
.then you can fade into another and another. I always thought it would be awesome to paint a house with it. Find a nice house in a normal neighborhood with a stringent neighborhood association. House is normal by day. But at night time, it turns into some sorta sick florescent tetris looking freakshow.
They sell the lights and paints at different wavelenghts... so you can actually paint several scenes (clearly) over a standard painting... then fire up wavelength #1 and kill normal light and you will see one wavelength of paint..
Southeastern Virginia REPRESENT!
My gameroom is filled with arcade games, and there is UV lighting from overhead. But I experimented with different designs and patterns to put on the walls (for what little wall-space remains visible).
The interesting combination I came across, which could apply to PC case mods as well, is by using regular paint, UV reactive paint, and glow-in-the-dark paint.
By using the three different types, you can create an image under normal everyday light. Then, when the lights go off and the UV light goes on, you can have a different image (caused by both the UV reactive paint and the photoluminescent paint).
Finally, once the UV light is off, you are left with the images created only by the photoluminescent paint colors.
So you can create some interesting changes in a picture based on the timing of regular and blacklight exposure.