You have indeed done it, outstanding!! Thanks for the updates.Creighton
Thanks Creighton! The wrap itself is just super gorgeous.
Now I have encountered wrinkling in certain areas after installing on the floor tom. Mostly around the leg brackets [Gretsch replacements]. This could be avoided by gluing the wrap down tight before installing hardware I suppose...but I've decided I don't want to do that - I like keeping it easily removable to ease my ever-changing mind. Who knows when I might miss the mahogany finish? Also the shells are nothing like consistent in their "topography" - aside from the old Ludwig bump, they've been cracked, sanded, gouges where removing the original wrap lifted outer mahogany ply [not me!], so that no matter what wrap I used, it would not go on there nice and flat.
Anyway I decided I just don't care about the wrinkles - basically they look like weird reflections anyway. And while I attached the two sections with latex contact cement at one seam, I'm thinking of simply using 3 or 4 brass thumb tacks for the final seam - easier and no messing with glue.
...also I realized the whole deal could be made way cheaper simply by using the more common hex glitter available at any large craft store. So I will be experimenting with that in future. The Dura Lar sheets and polymer emulsion are not expensive - the jug of emulsion I bought would do 4 or 5 kits easily.
Attached are two pics of the wrapped floor tom. The red cast toward the bottom is an artifact of this crappy cell phone. The badge is fake - I cut it out of a sheet of brass, palm sanded and toned down by finger-rubbing with raw umber oil paint.
I realize many members here will not jive with my super low stress attitude to this wrap job. :) My philosophy has for a long while been this - splits, cracks, missing pieces, wrinkles, whatever; if there's wrap on the drum, that's what colour/finish it is. And in this case the wrap, even though wrinkly here and there, is an improvement. The only truly cool and amazing deal is when the wrap is original to the drum - so given that this wrap is "fake", as I would also consider wrap from Delmar, I don't really care about imperfection.
[edit] I've attached a pic of some Ludwigs wrapped in Vintage Nickel Sparkle to give the closest idea to the actual colour of my wrap. Mine is just a tick lighter.
Here's the step by step -
1) mark and cut sheets leaving extra material for handling and to avoid emulsion sucking under the edges of the piece you're working with. mark sheets on what will be the front/top so markings can be removed after cutting [sharpie/isopropyl cleaner]
2) apply thick layer of polymer emulsion, smooth as best you can
3) sprinkle glitter until surface is just evenly covered - do not overload as this will push/weight down the glitter to the surface of the sheet
4) wait at least 24 hours or until emulsion is no longer milky
5) lightly scrub off loose glitter
6) wrap the drum
Pretty easy eh?
Mitch