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It's easier just adding them to your paint job, or if it's someone else's paint job, open that and add one to it.
To find the location of the paint job you need to extract base.scs
Once you've found the paint job you open it with your paint program and add the sticker, then you save that paint job in the mod you just created giving it the same name as the SCS one (the paint job that is, not the mod you can name that anything you like so long as it doesn't conflict with other mods).
If it's from a local mod you can do 2 things, find the paint job in the mod, open it, make your changes and replace it in the mod, or make a new mod for it as described above and place your mod above in the mod manager.
If it's from a Steam Workshop mod it's similar, but it's best to copy the Steam mod to your local mod folder otherwise your file will be overwritten when the Steam mod gets updated.
Obviously for replacing it in mods you don't have to extract base.scs, that's only for SCS paint jobs.
Credits for finding this, Google. L.L.C. Inc.
Why are you even posting to a third party site that steals content when that same exact mod is posted here.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=3179290090