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Liquid Sculpey
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Topic: Liquid Sculpey (Read 3827 times)
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Liquid Sculpey
«
on:
December 28, 2004, 10:25:43 am »
Hi. I have just begun to use liquid sculpty to make photograph transfers and have run into a glitch. I made my mother-in-law a darling pin which looks like a framed photo of my son.
The transfer (photo to liquid sculpty, bake and separate) worked beautifully, and looked great.
I ran into trouble when I attached the transfer to the premo (clay) backing. I applied a small amount of liquid scultpy to the unbaked premo clay (base /backing) and then secured the thin sculty photo transfer to the base. I thought I worked out all the air and had a good seal - but I guess not. When I based the piece I got a lot of small bubbles - they appear to be between the transfer and the base. Where did they all come from? How can I prevent all this bubbling? Should I roll a brayer over everything? I thought I would get a better seal if I attached the photo transfer to raw (unbaked) premo.
Help!
Thank you!
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Nicole
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Liquid Sculpey
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Reply #1 on:
January 06, 2005, 08:36:52 am »
Unfortunately I have not used Liquid Sculpey so I don't have any answers for you.
You may want to try lightly braying the piece to get all the air out. Or experiment with it a little more, attaching the photo transfer to a baked piece.
Maybe there is someone else out there who can help??
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Nicole Ulrich
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Liquid Sculpey
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Reply #2 on:
January 06, 2005, 01:41:10 pm »
Just guessing here but I bet the unbaked clay releases small amounts of gases when you bake it. I think this because you said lots of little bubbles. I think you will want to have both pieces baked and then join them - maybe with some other glue method.
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Metalman
AKA: Kurt Madison
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DebbieMoyer
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Liquid Sculpey
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Reply #3 on:
March 31, 2005, 05:52:00 pm »
I have been making a lot of different items using liquid sculpey and liquid fimo - have found that the liquid fimo works better - it seems to have clearer finish - more transparent. I have run into the same problem. Yes you need to burnish the piece well on top of the raw clay. Either use a brayer or a spoon (if you can do this without distorting the clay - takes practice). To be truthful, I have found this to work best. I print out colored pics on T-shirt iron on transfer sheets. Cut out your pic - I very carefully cover it (transfer side up) - bake it - let it cool - remove the paper on the back (I sometimes make a lot at one time so I put them into a bowl of cool water - it helps to wet the paper so it comes off easier).
Now you have a thin transparent sheet/shape with the pic integrated into it. I have found that putting it directly on the raw clay, without any glue or liquid sculpey between works better for me than trying to use the sculpey as a glue - found lots of little bubbles when I did that. I normally coat my pieces with Future floor polish (works great) for a great gloss shine. Several layers of it (make sure you let it dry in between coats) will also help to cover small blemishes.
Thought this would be of interest.
Debbie
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Metalman
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Liquid Sculpey
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Reply #4 on:
July 26, 2005, 04:49:00 pm »
A big thank you to you , Debbie!!!
that's great!
'>
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Metalman
AKA: Kurt Madison
Master Instructor Emeritus - Art Clay Silver
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