AMN News Archives

CDR Painting

By Matthew Toledo - 8/9/2005

When it comes to playing in a band, there are two major financial hurdles. The first hurdle is purchasing all your instruments. It doesn't matter if you're an all-acoustic band, or have stacks of amplifiers, acquiring your instrument takes a chunk out of your savings or your credit, depending on your situation. Painters paint paintings, writers write books, musicians eventually record a CD. This brings us to the second most expensive item a musician will encounter: CD replication.

When it comes to making a good impression with booking agents and fans, nothing can compete with a professionally recorded and replicated CD in a jewel case with full color art work. Unless you are an ace soundman and own your own recording equipment, there isn't much you can do about getting around the cost of recording a CD. However, there is a novel technique you can use to make a CD that you burned look more professional than a simple CDR. Plus, the novelty of the presentation might make your disk stand out against the others. All it takes is an origami CD case, some CDR's of your music, and a can or two of spray paint.

Gold or Platinum CD anyone?
Gold or Platinum CD anyone?

The details on how to make an origami CD case out of paper can be found in a previous AMN article. I suggest printing artwork on the paper that you will use to make the origami case. If your home printer isn't the best, you opt for black and white prints at kinko's for around 8 cents a piece. If you opt for color copies at Kinko's, you're looking at around $0.89 per page. Kinko's even has a computer program that you can download that will let you print your art at the local Kinko's on Court Street. You can then pick up your work when you're in town. You just need a debit or credit card and a connection to the internet.

Now that you have your artwork ready, a simple can of spray paint can be used to transform your plain-looking CDR into a professional looking demo CD. You want to buy a can of paint that is specifically designed to bond with plastic. I went to the local Wall-Mart and purchased several cans of paint for the purposes of writing this article. I purchased a can of white primer, red glossy paint, red matte paint, silver metallic paint, and gold metallic paint.

Start with blank CDR's. Don't burn your music to the CDR to start off with. There is a slight chance that spray paint could get on the wrong side of the CDR, thus making it unreadable. The last thing you want to do is sell or give someone a CDR that is broken.

Krylon paints ended up providing the best quality results. One can will cover over 100 CDR's
Krylon paints ended up providing the best quality results. One can will cover over 100 CDR's

Your results will varry based on the quality of your paint. Go for the best paint: Krylon. It will only cost you about $4.00 a can. A can of paint will last you for at least 100 CDR's or more.

Kyrlon makes a "Fusion" paint that supposedly was formulated to fuse to plastics. However, if you look at other cans of paint, you'll notice a lot of them say they are designed for wood, metal, and plastic. There is one Krylon paint that looks very cool and costs a bit more. Krylon's Fusion Mystic Prism will change colors depending on the angle of the light hitting it. It's pretty trippy. All you jam bands can thank me later.

DO NOT use fleck paints that give a textured, rock like finish to stuff. The flecks of paint have a good chance of coming off in a CD player. They may also make the CDR too thick to fit in some front-loading car stereo's.

There is a complete photo journal of my spray painting adventure locate on the AMN.

Step 1:

Find is a flat surface. It is IMPERATIVE that the CDR's lay data-side-down on a very flat surface. Spray paint has a knack of getting into any crack or crevice, so if your CD is not laying perfectly flat, paint will get on the data-side of the CD. That will make your CD unreadable. You could try using a piece of flat cardboard. Make sure you are in a well ventilated area, however strong winds outside will make it hard to paint the CDR and it will blow debris onto your work. Try doing this outside on a day that isn't so windy. If you have a garage, try that, but be warned… unless you want paint all over your garage floor, make sure you protect a large area of the garage floor with a tarp. Lay your flat piece of cardboard on top of the tarp.

Step 2:

Place your CD's on the flat surface. Leave some space on either side of each CDR. This will make it easier for you to paint the CDR without making uneven splotches or paint drips.

Step 3:

You do not need to prime your CDR. However, I've gotten better looking results if you first get a can of primer that comes reasonably close to the final color. Use white primer for light colors, pastels and metalics. Use gray primer for darker colors.

Step 4:

Make sure you shake the can of paint for a good couple of minutes before you start painting; otherwise the paint will come out uneven and make the CDR's look splotchy. Start spraying the can off to the side of any of the CDR's. Make sure the can is about a foot away from your target. Slowly move the can back and forth over the CDR's. Don't stop spraying or change directions in the middle of the CDR. You can stop and change directions over the free space you left on either side of each CDR back in step 2.

Don't try and cover the entire CD in one coat. You will need to paint 2 or three light coats. If you try and paint the CD in one swipe, you'll end up with a bunch of puddles of paint on the CD that will condense into drops. The surface tension of drops will actually pull paint off of the CD exposing the bare CDR surface.

This is what happens if you try to paint the CD in one coat: splotches!
This is what happens if you try to paint the CD in one coat: splotches!

Primer is more forgiving. You can generally get away with one coat of primer in one step.

Step 5:

Wait about 12 minutes. Check the CDR. If feel that you need more coats of paint, repeat step 4 until satisfied.

Step 6:

Now that you have painted CDR's, bring them to your computer and start burning your music on them. If any paint got on to the data-side of the disk, the CDR will fail to burn. If it fails, congratulations! You now own a fancy coaster. Take the CDR outside at your own convenience and finish painting the data side.

If the CDR burns just fine, you now have a fancy-looking, custom paint job on your CDR!

Other things you can try:

Try spray painting the INSIDE of a clear jewel case. It will give a plastic jewel case a smoothe, wet-looking translucent color. Spray painting the outside doesn't look that great.

Try painting the inside of a jewel case for a translucent look.
Try painting the inside of a jewel case for a translucent look.

Lay down one coat of paint, let it dry, and then put some of that blue masking tape that you can find at a local hardware store on the CDR. Now, lay down a second, different color of paint. Pull off the tape and you have a racing stripe on your CDR. You can write the name of your band in permanent marker in the middle of the stripe if you wish.

Are you good with stencils? Try spray painting your stencil art on a white-primer disk.

Why Even Do This?

The main reason to try CD painting is that the final product looks different. In the promotion game, any gimmick that makes you stand out is a plus. Everyone has a sharpie, lots of people use those donut shaped printer labels, not everyone paints. Paining is cheap too. You can cover dozens of disks with a cheap can of spay paint. I suppose it all comes down to opinion in the end. It depends on what you think looks more professional, a sticker printed by your computer, or a smooth coat of paint. Personally, I think any sticker that isn't made from vinyl looks cheap. Unless you have a $4,000 color laser printer, it's going to look cheap. But, that's my opinion. There is a danger with stickers: they come off. I had a sticker partially dislodge while inside my car's front-loading CD player durring a hot day. I had to use a pair of needle nose pliers to gently remove the disk and sticker.

Further Reading

Make a nice Origami CD holder for your CD. [ link ]

Why in the hell didn't I think of this?
Brilliant!

#1 by sarah on Aug 12, 2005 12:00:00 AM

th th th thank you!
cool cool

#2 by Jon on Aug 15, 2005 12:00:00 AM

Paint Ruins CDR?
You know, I've heard that you're not supposed to use permanent markers on a CDR, yet everyone does, and I've yet to have a CD fail because of it. I have a feeling the same goes for paint. I've spray painted a ton of CDR's for months now and no faliure.

I don't doubt that it will affect some CD's made of different materials. I guess it's trial and error. The cheap memorex CDR's they sell at Wall-Mart seem to handle the paint just fine.

#3 by Matt Toledo on Aug 16, 2005 12:00:00 AM

permanent marker on CD
I've had one CD fail with permanent marker on it - I left it in the sun in my car and it caused a bubble in the foil used for reflecting the laser. This was several years ago and I think it was a TDK CD-R.

#4 by Jeremy on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

printing
Ive used some white car base spray paint, to may not inject printable cdrs. I think layer of pva glue also works

#5 by Dan on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

Painting blank CD labels works too
I tried this with an old band, but we had too many CD's ruined. For $15 - $17 you can get packs of 100+ blank CD labels from Staples / Office Max / etc and paint those before sticking them on the CD. A little more money, but less headaches.

#6 by Pat on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

Printable CDRs?
It's a cool idea, but wouldn't an actual design printed on to the CD-R with a $100 Inkjet printer look better?

#7 by Anth on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

Name in Stencil
I sugest using stencil letters to put in the name of the band and the album, it kind of defeats the purpose on working so hard on making a cool looking disc only to do the sharpie thing over it at the end, there are many of the shelve good looking discs but the band's name printed like that is what would make it look more pro.

Great article.

#8 by Efren on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

Heat a problem?
I've spray painted CDs in the past, but didn't actually put them in my machine for fear of the heat from the computer would cause problems with the paint. Experience any problems with a CD's paint getting sticky after being in a machine for a long time?

The idea with the case is great! I did something similar with a clear cell phone cover a while back.

#9 by Olivia on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

Stencills
I've seen good results using a black unbranded CDR with a stencil for the band name / track name.

blakc is good as it looks less like a CDR

these are also pretty good.
http://svp.co.uk/products-solo.php?pid=109

or bite the bullet and get 500 properly pressed with barcodes and the whole 9 yards.. set up your own label.. though then of course you realise that the expensive part isn't the pressing or the recording.. it's the PR

www.bigstrides.net

#10 by alistair on Mar 06, 2006 11:00:00 PM

nice
I am definately not going to try to paint the CD that seems kinda unsafe if it gets too hot. I bought an epson r220 for printing on CDs, printer costs $100. The discs are no more expensive that regular CD-Rs. Inkjet really sucks on CDs because it smears with a tiny drop of water and they scratch easy. Use a clear acrylic spray on them after printing and it really does protect against water, in fact I wet my finger and rubbed on one with and one without spray and the result: one smeared and one didn't. easy.

#11 by nothing6 on Aug 15, 2006 12:00:00 AM

wow your awesome
I love u matt

#12 by ERich61 on Aug 13, 2005 12:00:00 AM

failure due to paint solvents
how long before the paint causes the cdr to fail???

i would advise against using any markers or paint on cdr's as the solvents cause a premature failure.

discmaker has cdr's with no logo's


dale

#13 by Dale on Aug 16, 2005 12:00:00 AM

We have done it and it works great!
I agree this is a great idea! Another goos Idea is custom making a stamp... You can buy ink that works on cd faces and it is much much quicker/ less messy than paint....
Good article matt!
Rob Peeples
Blu Vertaal
Cleveland, OH

#14 by Rob Peeples on Aug 17, 2005 12:00:00 AM

hi
can i just use the normal spray paint?

#15 by me on Mar 16, 2010 9:13:08 AM

i would like buy your product
Hello,i have many jewel i would my jewel have a look platinum so for that reason i would like your product ,thank you

#16 by RAMEAU DONALD on Apr 17, 2010 8:35:39 AM

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