I just bought a bunch of shrink plastic with the intent of doing black and white designs on them, but this is brilliant. I have a small Gelli plate gathering dust on my shelf, I might have to try this.
Also... A brush on sealer will keep ink, paint, or any colorant used from rubbing off... which it WILL with the least amount of abrasion, like wearing earrings or having something move back and forth on a keychain... Just a hint!
Wow thanks for sharing this very creative fun project, i'm excited to try this, so what size do you cut the shrink plastic in, i'm guessing about 7"X 5" & are those see-thru square plates, that you do your work on both glass or is the smaller one made of plastic or does it really matter, what i use for this area, please would someone respond, thanks a bunch.
Hallo! Ein ganz tolles Video! Ich habe es heute sofort probiert. Hast du Resin zum Schluss drüber gegeben? Meine glänzen nicht, sind ganz stumpf, aber die Muster sind klasse geworden
I see you didn't get an answer, I can't say what brand she used, but when shrink plastic shrinks, it gets thick. which is why you want to punch the hole in it first. xo
Also if you would like to try before buying a whole pack, you can use plastic #6(the number in the triangle). (Look arround your house, ex: sushi takeout boxes, croissant boxes etc)
@@delphylu2 I know you weren't asking me, but you would use Shrinky dink plastic paper, not shrink wrap. You can find it in craft stores or online. I love making shrinky dinks. You can buy it in colors or in clear. Plus you can use markers, colored pencils, paint, all sorts of cool ways to color it.
And if you don't have shrink plastic/shrinky dinks then you can just cut out the plane side of a plastic box but it should have a recycle sign with a six inside it
Did you seal with anything? These are fantastic! I've been playing with shrink plastic and alcohol ink, but now I've been inspired to get out my Gelli plate!