H
hangingmeat
Guest
I'm sure this has been tried- and i've never seen sheds that have been colored up close, so excuse my ignorance-
but I have a pile of shed horns that would be considered "hard whites"- no cracks, no chalk, just lost their color.
could a guy try one of these coloring methods, on some small samples to get good at it first, get them colored and sell them as "fresh browns"?
It just came up in conversation tonight, wondering how well these coloring methods look up close.
my first thought is that I'm sure up close you can tell a difference vs. the pictures we see on the internet and might acually LOWER the price.
What do you think?
but I have a pile of shed horns that would be considered "hard whites"- no cracks, no chalk, just lost their color.
could a guy try one of these coloring methods, on some small samples to get good at it first, get them colored and sell them as "fresh browns"?
It just came up in conversation tonight, wondering how well these coloring methods look up close.
my first thought is that I'm sure up close you can tell a difference vs. the pictures we see on the internet and might acually LOWER the price.
What do you think?