I am new to stamping (well one and a half years new), and this is certainly the best video I have watched regarding inks. It is amazing and I thank you very much for taking the time to share this with us all. Big crafty hugs from Australia😘
Thank you! This is a long-needed video. I’ve been basically grabbing whatever color I’m looking for without thinking about which type of ink it is. And then I go crazy wondering why my end product looks horrible.
OMG a brilliant explaination, and covers it all 👍 so wish i could have had this a couple years ago, would have made me soooo happy, but still loved to see it, thank you so much!!
Wonderful video, Carissa! I consider myself a seasoned stamper, but had never heard the tip of using white embossing powder vs. white pigment ink + clear powder. I've never tried the latter, though. My preferred white pigment ink is Lawn Fawn's Yeti. I did try the Unicorn from Hero Arts, but it never seemed to give me the results I was after. The Yeti ink just seems a little more bright, for lack of a better word. Just my opinion. Thank you for such a thorough video--I'm sure it will help many new and not-so-new crafters! :)
@@EllenHutsonLLC sure I used the versamark & clear powder (on a metallic paper) to emboss an image. It looked nice but I wanted to add a sentiment. I stamped over the heat embossed area (it was dry to the touch) w black pigment ink , put on more clear powder & tried to heat set. However the dye & powder seemed to slide off the layer of versamark/heat embossed powder. In general I find that any ink used on my stamps after versamark tends to bead up & not give a clear image- even if i cleaned the stamp. Does versamark not mix well w pigment inks?
I'm not sure about acetate, but Ranger Archival inks can be used on slick surfaces like vellum. I think you have to heat set them, though, so you would want a heat-resistant acetate if you wanted to try that. I have only ever used them on vellum (as far as slick surfaces go), and always heat set--mostly because I'm just impatient that way! LOL I also read that Brilliance inks can work on acetate, but you definitely have to heat set them. An alternative to heat-resistant craft acetate is laser printer transparencies. Not sure if they're more cost-effective, but just thought I'd put that out there. I did try to look up info about Ranger Archival inks, but couldn't find much. Maybe the folks at Ellen Hutson can find out more info. :)
Another great video by Carissa! So very helpful!!
This is by far the best ink video I've seen thank you so much!
This is the best overview of types and uses of inks that I have ever seen! Thank you so much!
Thank you so much!!!! All the different inks are so confusing and you made this very easy to understand!
I knew a lot of this information but the thoroughness and clarity of your presentation will be helpful to many. And I learned a few things too. ;)
I am new to stamping (well one and a half years new), and this is certainly the best video I have watched regarding inks. It is amazing and I thank you very much for taking the time to share this with us all. Big crafty hugs from Australia😘
yes, seen unbelievable many videos and this one is the very best!! And covers it all, even the ink tools, LOVED IT!!
Excellent video on inks, thank you for an organized summary of inks.
Very useful information, well presented, and thank you very much
Thanks for all the great tips.
What a great updated video on inks that I can share with new crafters!! Well done.
Great tutorial! Thank you. I’m a seasoned stamper but still found this informative.
I’ve been crafting for years and this is by far the best video EVER✌️🥰
Thank you for the amazing compliment!
New to this craft and was looking for thus information. Thank you very much for the explanation. This us helpful.
Thank you! This is a long-needed video. I’ve been basically grabbing whatever color I’m looking for without thinking about which type of ink it is. And then I go crazy wondering why my end product looks horrible.
LindaMaeNot same!
Great video. You explained the differences of the inks so well. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you so much. I'm still pretty new to card making and all the different inks confused me. A great explanation!
Very informative. Thank you
Chalk full of good info!
Perfect video. That was just what I needed at my stage of education in ink art! Thank you so much!
Glad it was helpful!
Wow, so much to take in yet so clear 😘
Thanks so much for this fantastic video. I finally understand all these inks. EH team is awesome!
Best. Video. Ever. Carissa, that was AMAZING! Thank you ❤️
If you use a tiny drop of glycerine with your dye inks, it will prolong the drying time and allow easier blending.
What a fun tip! Thank you!
Thank you for such a good video. I learned so much.
Thank you Carissa, you did a great job explaining everything clearly! Love your upbeatness (is that a word? It is now!)
Great video thank you. Maybe you can do a paper video
Good idea!
Awesome information. Thank you!
This is an excellent video, thank you so much for creating this video!
Great info! I keep forgetting which inks are water reactive and which ones are alcohol reactive. I took notes!!!
Wonderfully explained!! Thank you.
Thanks, So much information that is so useful.
OMG a brilliant explaination, and covers it all 👍 so wish i could have had this a couple years ago, would have made me soooo happy, but still loved to see it, thank you so much!!
Glad it was helpful! 😊
Loved this youtube! Thank you! Would love to have had a comparison between the hero arts water reactive and distress inks!
We will try to do one in the future. Thank you for the suggestion!
Thank you
Wonderful video, Carissa! I consider myself a seasoned stamper, but had never heard the tip of using white embossing powder vs. white pigment ink + clear powder. I've never tried the latter, though. My preferred white pigment ink is Lawn Fawn's Yeti. I did try the Unicorn from Hero Arts, but it never seemed to give me the results I was after. The Yeti ink just seems a little more bright, for lack of a better word. Just my opinion. Thank you for such a thorough video--I'm sure it will help many new and not-so-new crafters! :)
So well done ! Thank you Carissa.
This is SO helpful. Thank you for making it!!
Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, a much needed video.
Great job!!!!
Loved this video💕
Thank you 😊
Great refresher info.
Which coloured ones would you suggest for stamping on Black paper? Should be a Pigment or Hybrid, if I am correct.
So are pigments inks the least water reactive? I want to add watercolor work around stamping and not have to worry about bleeding from the stamping.
Just wondering about archival inks. Where do these fit in?
Hi. Thanks for the helpful video. Question....what brand of Bristol paper did you use? Thanks!
when purchasing, how can we figure out the type of ink?
Great tutorial. Learned a lot on choosing the right inks. Where can the Ink on 3 product be purchased. Like the no-line effect.
Hi Sandy, we carry it in our shop www.ellenhutson.com/ink-on-3-ink-pads-fadeout-no-line-coloring/
I used a pigment ink over heat embossed versamark & the pigment ink slid right off. What went wrong?
Can you give us a little more info? What were you wanting to do?
@@EllenHutsonLLC sure I used the versamark & clear powder (on a metallic paper) to emboss an image. It looked nice but I wanted to add a sentiment. I stamped over the heat embossed area (it was dry to the touch) w black pigment ink , put on more clear powder & tried to heat set. However the dye & powder seemed to slide off the layer of versamark/heat embossed powder.
In general I find that any ink used on my stamps after versamark tends to bead up & not give a clear image- even if i cleaned the stamp.
Does versamark not mix well w pigment inks?
Does anyone know of a non-solvent ink that will dry on acetate?
Let us investigate :)
MrsB8T interested
I'm not sure about acetate, but Ranger Archival inks can be used on slick surfaces like vellum. I think you have to heat set them, though, so you would want a heat-resistant acetate if you wanted to try that. I have only ever used them on vellum (as far as slick surfaces go), and always heat set--mostly because I'm just impatient that way! LOL I also read that Brilliance inks can work on acetate, but you definitely have to heat set them. An alternative to heat-resistant craft acetate is laser printer transparencies. Not sure if they're more cost-effective, but just thought I'd put that out there. I did try to look up info about Ranger Archival inks, but couldn't find much. Maybe the folks at Ellen Hutson can find out more info. :)
Question regarding Bristol Smooth Paper, since it's coated does this mean stamping a sentiment do we have to use a heat tool to avoid ink smudging?
Ponci Alarcon no its not that slippery
We agree with MrsB8T :)
Thank you!
@@lizziedae91 thank you.
@@EllenHutsonLLC thank you.
Make the video about the INK, not your hands. If you don't know what to do with your hands, keep them out of the video!