Listen, please use proper equipment when handling epoxy resin. Repeated exposure to it is not safe. It can cause breathing issues. Wear gloves, use a respiratory mask, make sure windows are open etc etc. There are horror stories online of people getting very sick after a few months of using it in non ventilated rooms
@@robiatkareem130 for creation of the base, the two chemicals used or normally Bisphenol A or F and Epichlorhydrin. For cures there are 100’s of them. Normally used are your aliphatic and aromatic amines.
I also wouldn’t pour it likes she’s doing. I usually tilt the cup to the side when adding the epoxy/resin. Then mix slowly to not add in more air. At the end you can use a heat source to get them out but it’s better to try to get as little in there as possibly. Also, putting the bottles in warm water before pouring helps as well bc then the consistency is more liquid so it doesn’t hold onto the bubbles as much and they can float to the surface easier
Part A is the resin, part B is the hardener. Mix together equal parts. Mix slowly making sure you scrap sides of cup and stiring stick. Mix slowly till clear. I measure my resin separately.
@@kyliebuchan5050make sure you get it in the right proportion. If you don’t, it can overheat and even melt a plastic dish or burn your skin in a second or even third degree burn if you are not careful. I work with this in my husband’s woodworking business and we mix it up often. Every once in a while it get mixed up a little bit wrong and you can see it melting the dish