I had a science teacher in elementary school that showed us and let us use this material to make a tiny animal cell. I complete forgot this existed until now
@@randomuse-yv4vd not sure of the type of plastic but there called shrink plastic too. So just looked it up and it's apparently polystyrene. hmm 🤔 who knew lol.
It’s very easy! First you have to print out a picture, then put the picture at the bottom of that glass thing. The trace it, poke a hole at the top ,then you can color it in, then just put it in the oven until it crushes up, then it sets back! Then you can take it out but it’s hot, and out the keychain on! I hope this helps
If you mean the paper under the plastic then yes, as it's just for tracing your drawings so it doesn't matter. Or you can draw freehand if you're capable.😊 To add if you meant the actual plastic, it's shrink wrap plastic so you don't have to get it from this specific brand or person.
I also thought it was Mod Podge although if it's B4 the resin and not on the back I'm not sure why as poscas seem to have worked with resin for other people doing this so maybe theirs aren't compatible. Or it's just a safety measure.
From what I've seen, the mod podge (a kind of crafting glue) is added so the resin can stick to the piece, since the plastic is smooth and doesn't have a lot of grip. By adding the glue, the resin (that shiny coating that requires UV light to harden) can then stick to the glue itself without problem!
Shrink paper and uv resin and that.s that white goo you spread on it before the resin? Then after resin hot air right? To get bubbles out and then uv light
Mod podge is for sealing the drawing with permanent ink, and uv resin is for the final touch to make the charm shiny. Without Mod podge the permanent ink bleeds into the resin.
@@nekoboxusalso fun fact: UV resin does not stick to polystyrene (what shrink paper is made of). The layer would peel off if you didn’t seal first. ALSO I’ve been pretty obsessed with this song since I watched this video. Too bad the artist doesn’t seem to have many more… 🎶
@@1ElleEllecan you pleaaase tell me what kind of paer that she put in oven? And what temperature and how much time? And can we do it with no resin?? Sorry too many questions
@@roshelhass7559 it's not paper it's shrink plastic and I can't recommend a specific temperature or time as each brand may be different. But Google should give you a round about figure. And no you don't have to use resin if you don't want to It just makes it stand out more and gives it a dome. And it can protect it longer. But it's not necessary. Hopefully that answers some Hun.
@@Juju-ei8lk@aliya2cool4u I'm pretty sure microwaving doesn't work! Some people use a microwave that has a convection oven setting, but you really shouldn't do this anywhere you cook food because of the plastics. I use a heat gun in a well ventilated space with a mask :) some people use mini ovens they buy just for crafts like this
I haven't seen it used with oil or watercolour I believe. I think I saw it tried with paint and it cracked. So using colour pencils or any type marker.
Hello, a question is that my oven is new and I am afraid of messing it up since I read the instructions and it says not to put paper or things like that. 😢😢😢😢
They're using an oven, not a microwave :) I use a heat gun - make sure you're well ventilated (breathing in the fumes is bad for you! Same with using resin for the coating). For ovens, buy a separate mini oven for crafts, don't bake these anywhere you will be cooking food :)
Shrinkydink plastic paper (aka polystyrene), drew on it with sharpies and posca pens (or equivalent), baked in an oven (don't do this in your food oven, I recommend a heat gun and a well ventilated area), coated with modgepodge (I think it's like pva glue?) when shrunk, before adding a layer of uv resin (again, take precautions, look up other vids on resin) where they used a heat gun to remove air bubbles in the resin, and cured it with a uv light