The only ingredient I don't have yet is the "flexible filler" for the outliner. It's 4 years since this video was made, and I can't find that particular adhesive. While other flexible adhesives may well work fine, some silicone chemicals are water-soluble and some are not - it would be just my luck to pick one that's not water soluble and then end up not being able to dilute it to the required consistency after adding the black colour! Do you have a recommendation for a suitable specific filler which you know works fine and is currently available in the UK please? 😃
Oh wow, this is amazing! I've just put up a greenhouse and worried about bird strikes and was looking into various stickers and was worried that once stuck on they'd be hard to remove and age badly. From what I've read birds tend to fly towards the sky and if there's a window, they'll look for an escape route. The best method is placing those stickers etc on the outside of the window so it got me thinking of stripes or dots, but keeping as much sunlight reflecting into the greenhouse. I stumbled across your video and think it may solve my few hours of searching for a solution! Thank you so much for the amazing idea 😊 P.S. as a child in primary school (UK) in the 90s, I designed a great mouldable putty using PVA glue mixed with the old soap powder that was kept by the large steel sinks and the old water based paint that came in squirty bottles! 😁 The putty smelled of old chemical soap and was great to manipulate until it set! In a way, that's like today's fidget toys! Hehe
Hi there, many thanks. I wonder if you may help me use apt language to identify the best peelable paint to buy. e.g the outline paint seems to be stronger and more flexible. I'm in Australia but used to enjoy making peelable window art in NZ about 15 years ago, but there's no such art outlets here to advise. I would greatly appreciate your advice. Kind regards.
I like the piping bag idea. I didn't catch what mixture you used in your black. I may be doing the technique where you make lines with glue on the glass. Let it dry. And color it with a marker. People tell me it doesn't have to be perfect. More realistic that way.
I like that you pointed out that water based paint and solvent based paint can be used on the same project as long as they are used in different areas.