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CD label printers are all well and good, and look professional, but decorating the CD yourself is more personal and a gift with a memory attached to it.

7

Have paper towels or napkins nearby.

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  1. When you're ready to start personalizing the CD, lay two paper towels (folded over to create a double layer the size of a single towel) or one towel square down flat on your worktable and place the burned CD on it, with the side that goes up in the player face-up. You can't paint the bottom .
    • Here is where anyone who knows anything about paint might get confused. The surface of a CD is almost perfectly smooth, and paint won't stick to a smooth surface. You could sand the CD, and ruin it, or you could keep reading.
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10

Write something on the CD.

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  1. Then, use a good quality felt-tip permanent marker. Seal it with a discreet coat of glass stain the same color as your background.
    • Beware: Ballpoint pens are murder on CDs/DVDs. Use only as a last resort, with as little pressure as humanly possible and even then, if possible, limit ballpoint writing to the un-coated ring of clear plastic in the very center around the spindle hole.
12

Play the CD!

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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    Does it need to be poster paint?
    Community Answer
    Absolutely not, I use sharpies. I think anything except for watercolor paint will work.
  • Question
    Will the CD still work after painting it? Is it risky or completely safe?
    Community Answer
    The kind of inks/paints you use might affect the material of the CD over time. Water-based colors are probably better. The layer of paint might affect a "slit" CD-player (the ones without tray where the CD gets swallowed in).
  • Question
    If I were to paint a CD with acrylic paint, would it be damaging (or even work, for that matter)?
    Aditya Telang
    Community Answer
    It may work, but it will certainly be damaging to your CD/DVD and the CD/DVD drive of the computer. Paint starts to strip after some time. If it happens to do so while your CD/DVD is being read, it will certainly damage the readable side of your CD/DVD. It may also scratch and damage the lens of the laser.
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      Tips

      • With some well-placed paper and masking tape, you can spray-paint designs on your CD.
      • You could always just decorate it with a sharpie or other permanent markers.
      • Use the poster paint to color an area, and then highlight it with glass stain of the same color. Makes it shiny.
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      Warnings

      • Some CD players do not like decorated/painted CDs for whatever reason and refuse to play them.
      • Make sure the CD is completely dry before handling it. Poster paints dry to a matte finish; glass stain retains a gloss. Tap with a cotton swab to test for dryness.
      • Always use spray paint away from heat or flame and in a well-ventilated area.
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      Things You'll Need

      • Computer with media player/cd burner software and hardware
      • Some means of getting the tracks you want
      • Poster paint and glass stain
      • Felt-tip marker(s)
      • Cotton swabs
      • Small portable battery-powered fan
      • Workspace
      • Time
      • Paper towels or squares of towel 12 x12
      • Trash can
      • Plain silver CDs
      • A creative mind
      • An appropriate CD case

      For the Sharpie Tactic

      • Sharpies or other Permanent Markers (an arrangement of colors)
      • A CD
      • A computer with the data you’re burning onto it, and all the software and hardware needed
      • Paper to make the CD case OR a plastic or paper CD case

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