culture hustle has this weird even more chrome paint that id argue is even more chrome than these pens. might be worth a look into if you want tome make more chrome dice
I would have personally went with gold for the chrome dice but they both turned out great. Would you consider making Ben 10 dice(each representing an alien form and a box using the Omnitrix colors and symbol)
@@Rybonator the reason the chrome was nicer on the upper portion of the rested Resin "paperweight", is because surface tension, in combination with density of the mass of the paint rising due to liquid physics, thereby make an even surface of the less dense materials to the top, in this case I belive the chrome paint that wasn't mixed in
I was thinking the same. Dark paint on the dice with the chrome mixed in or inking chrome on a dark color dice. Either way it would really make the numbers pop.
Just a heads up: as paint, the shiny wears off over time, leaving a mediocre silver paint effect behind. Some clear coat might keep it safe; I haven't tried it yet, though. (I used one of these markers to help my kid know which Pro controller was dad's, since the haze of goldfish cheez on his controller apparently wasn't visible enough. Some chrome around the LEDs looked great at first, but now it's just silverish.)
I discovered your channel 3 days ago. By this time, I've watched more than half of your videos, ordered myself a set of dice to use as masters, a couple of miniatures to paint and bookmarked the supplies I would need to start casting. It's also interesting to see your evolution from that first set of gold dice to these Liquid Chrome ones and everything in between. Color me inspired! First order of business on my side will be making a dice box / tray and after that, once I figure out what supplies I can use (sadly the variety is lacking in silicone and resin in Romania), I will document my first attempt at dice casting. I have no idea what I'm doing, but the road ahead looks fun!
I love the idea! Only I had follow up of Gold Dice with for Number's to make them pop! Ooh an Expensive but Ambitious project would be making real Gold Dice! Perfect for a Gold obsessed Dice Goblin
Man, it's been a while since I've been looking at the awesome dice you make and wishing I HAD THEM ALL. Thanks to your inspo I just bought my first mold and first batch of resin. You are amazing!
This Moltow marker refill is one of the top choices for prop makers when creating a chrome finish. Works great in an airbrush! I know Punished Props and Tested have both used this in many of their videos.
I have an idea. Remember the darkest dice set he made? Why not slap that liquid Chrome as an inking. Might make a nice reflection with the dark surface to contrast.
This marker is also a secret tip in prop and model building comunitys. You can actually use the refill packs as airbrush ink and create insanely shiny surfaces.
As others have pointed out, the effect of the mirror will fade in time, but you can help preserve the effect by giving it a topcoat. What I find works well is funny enough, nail polish top coat. It can also give any paints that have a mat finish to them a glossy look. I've actually started looking into just using nail polish in general for painting numbers as they have some rather bold colors and may even try and use them as pigments.
There's a product called Liquid Leaf that will give you a metallic finish very similar to this, but in a LOT of colors (several shades of gold or silver, copper, etc) I've worked with it before for touching up picture frames, though I've not tried it with resin. I THINK the solvent is toluene, so that might give you info on compatibility. It gives a wonderful shiny surface, not quite a mirror, but close! The instructions say to blow on the paint as it dries to enhance the shininess, and it really does help.
On the red dice tray, the chrome dice set stands out so beautifully! I love it so much! I need a pressure pot etc to actually make dice. I don’t have one so dice making is off the table right now.
The Liquid Chrome marker is REALLY impressive in person especially. Can't comment on its longevity personally but it really makes you feel like you're writing with liquid tin foil.
I was thinking, since it sticks well to the resin, could you put a very thin layer of resin in the bottom and maybe one side with the resin. After that coat the resin sides with ink, let dry, and then proceed with filling the rest of the of the dice molds as normal. I feel that it would mimic the modern way or making mirrors which is putting a thin piece of tin or aluminum on the back side of a piece of glass. That way, one or two sides may be opaque but the rest should look cool.
If you are interested in trying this for yourself - Here is an affiliate link to the liquid chrome stuff - amzn.to/3i0Si7y . I'd say that the liquid refill is more valuable and versatile than the marker, but the marker makes for QUICK inking :)
@@vanerek no and yes. Montana offers a liquid metal line that includes gold, silver and copper. it is highly light reflective however misses out on the mirror effect even when air brushed. however the MTN liquid metal line up is much cheaper than the liquid chrome. liquid metallics are 10 bucks give or take for 200ml, where as the liquid chrome is 27-35 bucks for 30 mls.
I love the full chrome set, it looks so ethereal. Perfect for like a college of spirits bard. I love the experimentation videos you get such cool results. Also the skillshare auditions were wonderful. Not sure where the saga can go from here but I’m interested to see what happens next.
We use to use these markers to ink our dice back in the 80’s. You could buy them in all the metallic colors( gold,silver and copper) We also used good old crayola crayons to “ink” our dice. Good times lol
you should try this again with stuart semple's mirror paint! it's even more chrome, and it's made by the same guy who did the blackest black pigment you used a while back :)
Those mirrored pieces look fantastic and would be awesome to do in some sort of diorama or dungeon piece. if you needed a magic liquid mirror lookin' thing
If you want some super chrome looking dice, there are powders out there usually used for nail art type stuff that I imagine you could coat the inside of the molds with. I'm not sure how long lasting it would be, but it exists
I think this would work well with the 2 mold technique? So first you have a slightly smaller mold without the numbers and you try to make those as shiney as possible (maybe just paint the outside with the chrome) And then you use your regular dice molds with clear resin to encase the smaller ones. I saw someone on tiktok do that
I actually think your first guess might have been right about why the bottom of the last test pieces didn't cure. It kind of makes sense that whatever that liquid is made of might have prevented air from getting through the resin when in a complete layer across the top
Those ghostly dice look amazing. I wonder how they would look with also some color mixed in, or if it would ruin it, like little blue, or cyanny green, or orangy red, idk. Or glow in the dark powder. At least, you should keep this concept, it is amazing.
These turned out fantastic. I think i like the clear dice with the chrome better. I've been wondering how those chrome/mirror nail powders would react with resin but this seems like a more feasible option. Now i can see my look of disappointment glaring back at me as i roll a nat 1.
For some reason (maybe the title?) I was expecting you to do a liquid core with the liquid chrome, so now I would like to respectfully suggest that concept for a future video- I bet it would look like an old fashioned thermometer filled with mercury!
It would be cool to see a dice tray with a built in black light strip, and some fluorescent dice so that when you roll them in the tray they light up. Could even fill the numbers with non-fluorescent material so that you can read the dark numbers on the bright dice.
I started drooling with the finished dice, the silver looks amazing and it could work incredibly well on some settings. The "chrome" set reminded me of the "Wraith: the oblivion" dice set from white wolf from the few millenia ago
what an interesting way to use liquid chrome, love the effect. the stuff is so expensive but looks really nice. i have noticed over time it will dull out and with enough use, it will wear off as ink. airbrushing this stuff is the way to go to get an even coat without any marker streaks. it looks so cool in resin tho im going to have to try this, but with a much cheaper chrome, MTN liquid silver should nail the head on the hammer. saves a ton of money too if your going to use it in a resin suspension. liquid chrome costs about 30 bucks for 30 mls, where as Montana also offers liquid metallics such as copper, silver and gold, all have a high metallic shimmer/luster. however miss out on a mirror effect.
Wondering how that pen would work on a printed miniature. That aside the dice look nice! Me personally I would have made the numbers black on the all chrome dice.
I don't know about the chrome in particular, but a lot of people in the mini painting community use the "pen refill" droppers as paint for airbrushing minis
they turned out beautifully! i love the clear ones especially, but both sets are great. Molotow is a good brand for fineliners and markers, i really like them and i got some cool neon markers from them! nice to see they have other great markers, too :)
Can you test the new dice molds from Sophie and Toffee which they release next month? There will be one d20-diorama-size one 🥺. Love what you did with the liquid chrome..so shiny and pretty
I had the same thing with excess resin in a plastic cup being hard at the top and not fully cured at the bottom. It happened to me with standard 1:1 resin with a little bit of alcohol ink. The only answer i can find to this is that it's incredibly hard to properly mix resin right next to walls and in this kind of "trench" as I would call it, so the resin has a harder time curing properly. For me it hardened over the next day or two, am sure it was the same for you.
It might even look better on a very very dark black dice If the "chrome" has a transparency I think it'll make it more mirror like If I understand how mirrors work (I might not)
the bottoms of mixing cups dont always mix well for whatever reason, they're way more often tacky than the rest of the mix. ive always guessed it had to do with the mixing vessels geometry
My guess would be that the resin needs a stronger concentration of hardener when using this as a liquid ink on larger surface areas like the cups - when I was looking into resin myself there were quite a few brands that warned of certain metals causing the resin not to cure.
I would prob try using the refil ink for your logo on a dark D6 like black, the "light" colors draw attention away from seeing the detail (in my mind).
I'm wondering if you could get the mirror effect by making smaller versions of blank dice, paint them with the chrome and then put them inside the real dice 🤔
Would love to see you try more of the stuff from Culturehustle, like their own liquid mirror paint and their holographic and color changing pigments. Their glow in the dark powders are awesome too!
gosh darn it, my stupid adhd brain totally forgot about the audition... but all of them were so so good! (lost my shit at John Travolta from Grease, love that movie!) also, the dice are gorgeous as always! i just noticed how good you got at making dice! like, you are so routined and confident now, it is amazing
All the funny voices done for the skillshare were so cool! I loved how the silver turned out, even if it wasn't chrome, but I would ink in another color. Also it would probably take a LOT of time since you said it dries slowly, but to get the chrome effect maybe you could take just a regular die (clear or silver) and paint it entirely in the chrome, and ink the numbers, then dip it in another coat of resin to keep the chrome effect on the entire die? Thanks for the vids :)
How bout ranger dice? Brown, green leaf paper, gold inking? (Yes, gold. I know it’s your favorite) It would also look really cool with brown and green!
The reason you had uncured resin at the bottom of the cup is that that was the cup you mixed the resin in. What happens is when you're pouring one part in it settles at the bottom and it's actually really difficult to mix that as the bottom is not flat, plus you're using a rounded stick to mix with. It happens all the time for me when doing experiments in the mixing cup. If you pour that resin into another cup and did the experiment it'll work fine as the small unmixed portion at the bottom doesn't pour out.
That cloudy effect also happens when we put a normal top coat polish over mirror effect nail dust, probably because it separates the shiny particles. Daily Charme has developed the dust and a gel top coat (that needs UV or led curing) to go over the mirror effect without changing it. I was wondering if you could use that dust on the walls of your mold and create a mirror shiny dice! They also have it in GOLD,rose gold and other colorful colorshifting mirror effect.
I'd love to see your take on dice blanks/inserts. Its where you cast dice without the numbers that are a bit smaller than your regular dice and then you insert the blanks into your regular molds to create an outer shell of resin and your numbers.
It would be cool to see more video game inspired dice sets, your minecraft ones looked awesome. A strange game-based dice suggestion of mine would be dice based on The Binding of Isaac, where inside clear dice, there could be polymer clay sculptures of the various items and consumables from the game. The irony is that there are DnD dice in the game as items.
I painted a Necron Army with the liquid chrome, and I can tell you that thing is really hard to properly work with it. You have to airbrush it, but with brush you can make certain parts to shine really good, however is reaaaaaally easy to accidentally buff the paint and it instantly loses it's shine. it took me severall tries to get it right.
Have you conidered filling a mold up half way, letting it cure, adding the liquid mirror, let it cure and then fill up the rest with clear resin so it looks like there's a mirror sheen in the middle of the dice? No idea if it would work but it's where my mind went during the video
For the clear dice I'd try 2 layers of paint. Bright contrasting color in the numbers which then gets covered by the chrome. From the outside it looks the same but when looking at the other dice faces through the clear resin there will be some color bouncing about due to the base layer under the chromed numbers.
Might be already mentioned, but I guess the uncured resin comes from the corners of your cups. Your mixing sticks are round, try to find something with a nice 90° corner. I use some bamboo sticks for food stuff, they have a little handle section to hold them, that is a nice paddle like shape to use for mixing.
I wonder if you could use the refill as the liquid in one of the swirling center dice? The chrome seems to thin out significantly when added to the resin itself, but I wonder if it wasn't diluted if it would keep more of the chrome effect as opposed to becoming micah-like?
You should try double layered inkings with clear dice. Like a deep blue or red first then the silver layer on top. The outside would be the same as these, but there'd be more color inside the dice.
These hecking futuristic dice!!!!! I love them!!!! Have you seen the one dice where you take shiny paper and fold a dice to put into a clear one? That could give you a mirror affect. Buuuuuuuut I’m actually really curious to see if you can make one using pigments like this!!!!
You should try mirror chrome powders (usually used for nails)! It does indeed come in gold. Best bet would probably be to either rub into the molds before pouring resin, or cast clear dice, rub the powder on top once the resin is cured and then do a thin top coat (brushed on UV resin should work!) These powders are ment to be used buffed onto gel top coats and then clear coated. Gel nail polished are made of a type of resin. So should work!
very sparkly :D As an idea, I keep seeing dice done with inserts where the inserts are put in blanks first, then the blanks put into the dice. Would be curious to see how to do such dice from start to finish and why they're useful.
there have been chrome nail polishes around for a while and they have an issue with clear top coats to protect the mirror finish. just a heads up. if whatever you use shrinks when drying/curing you might disrupt the chrome layer and ruin the finish.
Honestly the post work (sanding etc.) is just easier on cap molds. I'd say most of the time, I only end up having to sand the d20 and d10's for cap molds, where I have to sand all sides on all dice for hanging molds.
I wonder if there is something removable you could paint into the numbers, then put the shiny stuff all over, remove the numbers, and paint them something else (or leave them clear)
WITNESS ME!
culture hustle has this weird even more chrome paint that id argue is even more chrome than these pens. might be worth a look into if you want tome make more chrome dice
YOU HAVE BEEN WITNESSED!
I would have personally went with gold for the chrome dice but they both turned out great. Would you consider making Ben 10 dice(each representing an alien form and a box using the Omnitrix colors and symbol)
@@scorpius1401 I CAN NOW GO TO THE GATES OF VALHALLA!
Rybonator GLORIOUS
That stuff is AMAZING for airbrushing. Thin it out with a little thinner and it makes some of the best fake chrome paint.
I might need to do that for my sigmar minis sometime! :D
Doesn't it change over time though?
Ohh yeah! Painted a dragon with it. It is so awesome!
No thinner needed
@@Rybonator the reason the chrome was nicer on the upper portion of the rested Resin "paperweight", is because surface tension, in combination with density of the mass of the paint rising due to liquid physics, thereby make an even surface of the less dense materials to the top, in this case I belive the chrome paint that wasn't mixed in
I'd love to see a navy blue or black set numbered with this paint. As I get older I have more difficulty reading the dice and need a strong contrast.
Oh I hadn't thought about the navy, that's a good combo!
Deep red should be great too!
I was thinking the same. Dark paint on the dice with the chrome mixed in or inking chrome on a dark color dice. Either way it would really make the numbers pop.
A dark cloudy interior should look good with silver inking.
Love this idea, especially the navy or a midnight blue.
HUGE Thank you to all the amazing Skillshare Transitions Audition folks! :) Rybowife and I loved hearing them all!
Are you still going to take them? I got distracted making a script and trying to make a recording set up and... well... I'm late T-T
Now you've just made me wish there was a rybowife audition!
I'm german and tbh, i couldn't understand the "german" audition, even after hearing it twice.
Just a heads up: as paint, the shiny wears off over time, leaving a mediocre silver paint effect behind. Some clear coat might keep it safe; I haven't tried it yet, though. (I used one of these markers to help my kid know which Pro controller was dad's, since the haze of goldfish cheez on his controller apparently wasn't visible enough. Some chrome around the LEDs looked great at first, but now it's just silverish.)
Thanks for the heads up. Maybe I can seal it in somehow... I'll look into it!
@@Rybonator Have you considered just painting/coloring a blank insert and using clear resin on the outside?
If I remember right, Adam Savage used this stuff for a sword prop on Tested, I think he used a spray varnish overtop of it.
Be careful with sealants as those also fade them, or did in the nail world. Most of our top coans were useless if we wanted to keep the shine.
Okay but that ink on dark dice??? Like midnight blue, black, dark purple, dark reds... It would look so freaking good!
I discovered your channel 3 days ago. By this time, I've watched more than half of your videos, ordered myself a set of dice to use as masters, a couple of miniatures to paint and bookmarked the supplies I would need to start casting. It's also interesting to see your evolution from that first set of gold dice to these Liquid Chrome ones and everything in between. Color me inspired! First order of business on my side will be making a dice box / tray and after that, once I figure out what supplies I can use (sadly the variety is lacking in silicone and resin in Romania), I will document my first attempt at dice casting. I have no idea what I'm doing, but the road ahead looks fun!
Imagine if the entire surface is colored with this stuff, and the numbers colored gold. It would be so shiny.
Don't tempt me frodo.
@@Rybonator I had the exact same thought. do it
I love the idea!
Only I had follow up of Gold Dice with for Number's to make them pop!
Ooh an Expensive but Ambitious project would be making real Gold Dice!
Perfect for a Gold obsessed Dice Goblin
@@Rybonator pls dewit
if you do airbrush/paint the outside, I do recommend covering it with some sort of sealer or laquer. else it wont stay too long
You are the only youtuber who's sponsor message I actually listen to. It just keeps getting better!
Man, it's been a while since I've been looking at the awesome dice you make and wishing I HAD THEM ALL. Thanks to your inspo I just bought my first mold and first batch of resin. You are amazing!
This Moltow marker refill is one of the top choices for prop makers when creating a chrome finish. Works great in an airbrush! I know Punished Props and Tested have both used this in many of their videos.
I have an idea. Remember the darkest dice set he made? Why not slap that liquid Chrome as an inking. Might make a nice reflection with the dark surface to contrast.
Black and Chrome looks great together too! I need to do this :)
This marker is also a secret tip in prop and model building comunitys. You can actually use the refill packs as airbrush ink and create insanely shiny surfaces.
As others have pointed out, the effect of the mirror will fade in time, but you can help preserve the effect by giving it a topcoat. What I find works well is funny enough, nail polish top coat. It can also give any paints that have a mat finish to them a glossy look. I've actually started looking into just using nail polish in general for painting numbers as they have some rather bold colors and may even try and use them as pigments.
There's a product called Liquid Leaf that will give you a metallic finish very similar to this, but in a LOT of colors (several shades of gold or silver, copper, etc) I've worked with it before for touching up picture frames, though I've not tried it with resin. I THINK the solvent is toluene, so that might give you info on compatibility. It gives a wonderful shiny surface, not quite a mirror, but close! The instructions say to blow on the paint as it dries to enhance the shininess, and it really does help.
On the red dice tray, the chrome dice set stands out so beautifully! I love it so much! I need a pressure pot etc to actually make dice. I don’t have one so dice making is off the table right now.
I'll work on a series of making a set without a pressure pot to help out sometime :)
The Liquid Chrome marker is REALLY impressive in person especially. Can't comment on its longevity personally but it really makes you feel like you're writing with liquid tin foil.
Right? It's so nice IRL :D
I was thinking, since it sticks well to the resin, could you put a very thin layer of resin in the bottom and maybe one side with the resin. After that coat the resin sides with ink, let dry, and then proceed with filling the rest of the of the dice molds as normal. I feel that it would mimic the modern way or making mirrors which is putting a thin piece of tin or aluminum on the back side of a piece of glass. That way, one or two sides may be opaque but the rest should look cool.
It's worth a shot! :D
If you are interested in trying this for yourself - Here is an affiliate link to the liquid chrome stuff - amzn.to/3i0Si7y . I'd say that the liquid refill is more valuable and versatile than the marker, but the marker makes for QUICK inking :)
Does it come in gold?
@@vanerek no and yes. Montana offers a liquid metal line that includes gold, silver and copper. it is highly light reflective however misses out on the mirror effect even when air brushed. however the MTN liquid metal line up is much cheaper than the liquid chrome. liquid metallics are 10 bucks give or take for 200ml, where as the liquid chrome is 27-35 bucks for 30 mls.
Woot! Happy to see my audition made it on the video. Loved hearing all of the other auditions as well!
I love the full chrome set, it looks so ethereal. Perfect for like a college of spirits bard. I love the experimentation videos you get such cool results. Also the skillshare auditions were wonderful. Not sure where the saga can go from here but I’m interested to see what happens next.
We use to use these markers to ink our dice back in the 80’s. You could buy them in all the metallic colors( gold,silver and copper) We also used good old crayola crayons to “ink” our dice. Good times lol
I would love to see a video of your whole dice collection! I cant imagine how many you have :)
I did one over a year ago, but the collection has certainly expanded :)
@@Rybonator would love to see an updated one
YES! My favorite dice maker is at it again!
Ayyy :) Thanks Skr :) Glad you like what I do!
Chrome numbers on black die would look so cool!
Oh absolutely :D
you should try this again with stuart semple's mirror paint! it's even more chrome, and it's made by the same guy who did the blackest black pigment you used a while back :)
Those mirrored pieces look fantastic and would be awesome to do in some sort of diorama or dungeon piece. if you needed a magic liquid mirror lookin' thing
Oh yeah! Just painting it on the surface of a small pool in a diorama would be perfect :)
If you want some super chrome looking dice, there are powders out there usually used for nail art type stuff that I imagine you could coat the inside of the molds with. I'm not sure how long lasting it would be, but it exists
I think this would work well with the 2 mold technique? So first you have a slightly smaller mold without the numbers and you try to make those as shiney as possible (maybe just paint the outside with the chrome) And then you use your regular dice molds with clear resin to encase the smaller ones. I saw someone on tiktok do that
Everytime i watch this channel i get new ideas. Ill take a look for that mirror shine liquid gold see what i can find
Please let me know if you find anything :D Also I'm glad I can help in some small way!
I actually think your first guess might have been right about why the bottom of the last test pieces didn't cure. It kind of makes sense that whatever that liquid is made of might have prevented air from getting through the resin when in a complete layer across the top
Looks really cool
I love BOTH of them! So want to see this with purple dice and the silver mirror for the numbers.
Oh that's a good combo!
Those ghostly dice look amazing. I wonder how they would look with also some color mixed in, or if it would ruin it, like little blue, or cyanny green, or orangy red, idk. Or glow in the dark powder. At least, you should keep this concept, it is amazing.
This stuff would look so badass inked on a pare of blood red dice! Like, a vampire themed set!
Shiney math rocks 🪨, look amazing!
These turned out fantastic. I think i like the clear dice with the chrome better. I've been wondering how those chrome/mirror nail powders would react with resin but this seems like a more feasible option. Now i can see my look of disappointment glaring back at me as i roll a nat 1.
"Oh... I did that. The dice are telling me that it's MY fault."
grandma and grandpa had this pen in gold when I was a kid :)I got to use it when writing christmas cards or other nice projects but not random stuff.
For some reason (maybe the title?) I was expecting you to do a liquid core with the liquid chrome, so now I would like to respectfully suggest that concept for a future video- I bet it would look like an old fashioned thermometer filled with mercury!
It would be cool to see a dice tray with a built in black light strip, and some fluorescent dice so that when you roll them in the tray they light up. Could even fill the numbers with non-fluorescent material so that you can read the dark numbers on the bright dice.
That'd be a fun thing to try and make :D
@@Rybonator I would definitely make the black light strip recessed in the tray so it is not blinding anyone at the table.
I started drooling with the finished dice, the silver looks amazing and it could work incredibly well on some settings.
The "chrome" set reminded me of the "Wraith: the oblivion" dice set from white wolf from the few millenia ago
Thanks Vanerek :D I'm glad you liked them that much!
what an interesting way to use liquid chrome, love the effect. the stuff is so expensive but looks really nice. i have noticed over time it will dull out and with enough use, it will wear off as ink. airbrushing this stuff is the way to go to get an even coat without any marker streaks. it looks so cool in resin tho im going to have to try this, but with a much cheaper chrome, MTN liquid silver should nail the head on the hammer. saves a ton of money too if your going to use it in a resin suspension. liquid chrome costs about 30 bucks for 30 mls, where as Montana also offers liquid metallics such as copper, silver and gold, all have a high metallic shimmer/luster. however miss out on a mirror effect.
5:58 *DID SOMEBODY SAY [THUNDERFURY, BLESSED BLADE OF THE WINDSEEKER]?!*
Die idea: Try using that shaker/snowglobe method, but instead of glitter, you insert one smaller die so it free rolls inside.
Double the dice, double the fun!
I think I'd like to see you use this as the numbering on different colored dice as well I feel like that will have a great effect someday
Wondering how that pen would work on a printed miniature. That aside the dice look nice! Me personally I would have made the numbers black on the all chrome dice.
I've seen some people use it on flat surfaces like swords! It's not bad, but goes on WAY better with an airbrush :)
I don't know about the chrome in particular, but a lot of people in the mini painting community use the "pen refill" droppers as paint for airbrushing minis
they turned out beautifully! i love the clear ones especially, but both sets are great. Molotow is a good brand for fineliners and markers, i really like them and i got some cool neon markers from them! nice to see they have other great markers, too :)
I hadn't heard of Molotow until this, glad to know it's a quality brand :)
@@Rybonator speaking of neon, did you ever do a neon dice set? that sure would be awesome! :D
Can you test the new dice molds from Sophie and Toffee which they release next month? There will be one d20-diorama-size one 🥺.
Love what you did with the liquid chrome..so shiny and pretty
Absolutely!
I’ve found that the ink looks even more shiny on non porous materials like plastic, it’s pretty crazy
The clear ones look like diamonds! Both sets are gorgeous.
I had the same thing with excess resin in a plastic cup being hard at the top and not fully cured at the bottom. It happened to me with standard 1:1 resin with a little bit of alcohol ink. The only answer i can find to this is that it's incredibly hard to properly mix resin right next to walls and in this kind of "trench" as I would call it, so the resin has a harder time curing properly. For me it hardened over the next day or two, am sure it was the same for you.
Yeah maybe I just didn't mix it enough :/ Oh well! I'll try better next time :)
😲 Liquid Chrome (edit) that marker effect looks awesome 🙂
Right? I was super surprised at how well it worked
It might even look better on a very very dark black dice
If the "chrome" has a transparency I think it'll make it more mirror like
If I understand how mirrors work (I might not)
Idk how mirrors or magnets work, but I'll put both in some dice!
the bottoms of mixing cups dont always mix well for whatever reason, they're way more often tacky than the rest of the mix. ive always guessed it had to do with the mixing vessels geometry
Yeah maybe I just didn't mix those. I USUALLY never have that problem though. Oh well :/
My guess would be that the resin needs a stronger concentration of hardener when using this as a liquid ink on larger surface areas like the cups - when I was looking into resin myself there were quite a few brands that warned of certain metals causing the resin not to cure.
That would look great on a darker set of dice!
I didn’t realize you were going to use the whole script! XD Ahhh, my shortness has been revealed!
I would prob try using the refil ink for your logo on a dark D6 like black, the "light" colors draw attention away from seeing the detail (in my mind).
Oh this stuff is DYING to be inked on a pitch black set :)
I'm wondering if you could get the mirror effect by making smaller versions of blank dice, paint them with the chrome and then put them inside the real dice 🤔
You can TOTALLY do that :)
Would love to see you try more of the stuff from Culturehustle, like their own liquid mirror paint and their holographic and color changing pigments. Their glow in the dark powders are awesome too!
I can do that :)
Oooooo! Black dice with the mirror ink! That would be puuuurty…. Or galaxy dice! So many possibilities 🤣
Haven't watched the video yet, but I am curious. Have you ever thought of putting the skins of onions in dice? Might look cool
Yes this is great
Oh I like that idea! Maybe a red onion for more contrast :)
Also my name was spelled wrong but, I do like how you spelled it! (So no worrys)
gosh darn it, my stupid adhd brain totally forgot about the audition... but all of them were so so good! (lost my shit at John Travolta from Grease, love that movie!)
also, the dice are gorgeous as always! i just noticed how good you got at making dice! like, you are so routined and confident now, it is amazing
I'd LOVE to see how this goes with some inks in there to change the color... That swirly fine silver is incredible
Amazing Video. And by far the smoothest transition into the Skill Share Ad. Impressive, most impressive.
What a great concept for experimenting with!! I loved this video and I love how things turned out! So shiny!!
Wow, looks like the Unicorn blood from Harry Potter!
All the funny voices done for the skillshare were so cool! I loved how the silver turned out, even if it wasn't chrome, but I would ink in another color. Also it would probably take a LOT of time since you said it dries slowly, but to get the chrome effect maybe you could take just a regular die (clear or silver) and paint it entirely in the chrome, and ink the numbers, then dip it in another coat of resin to keep the chrome effect on the entire die?
Thanks for the vids :)
I love these pens so much, I love jazzing up my shoes with them
How bout ranger dice? Brown, green leaf paper, gold inking? (Yes, gold. I know it’s your favorite) It would also look really cool with brown and green!
I love the liquid chrome pens! I have also used them to ink in dice numbers before. :D
The reason you had uncured resin at the bottom of the cup is that that was the cup you mixed the resin in. What happens is when you're pouring one part in it settles at the bottom and it's actually really difficult to mix that as the bottom is not flat, plus you're using a rounded stick to mix with. It happens all the time for me when doing experiments in the mixing cup. If you pour that resin into another cup and did the experiment it'll work fine as the small unmixed portion at the bottom doesn't pour out.
I wonder if the chrome would pop better on a black or darker coloured dice set
Probably! I might have to do a round 2 :)
That cloudy effect also happens when we put a normal top coat polish over mirror effect nail dust, probably because it separates the shiny particles. Daily Charme has developed the dust and a gel top coat (that needs UV or led curing) to go over the mirror effect without changing it. I was wondering if you could use that dust on the walls of your mold and create a mirror shiny dice! They also have it in GOLD,rose gold and other colorful colorshifting mirror effect.
I'd love to see your take on dice blanks/inserts. Its where you cast dice without the numbers that are a bit smaller than your regular dice and then you insert the blanks into your regular molds to create an outer shell of resin and your numbers.
I bet doing a gunmetal style dice inked with that liquid chrome would be so good looking for a gunslinger type character
I'm now just imagining inking those lapis lazuli dice from the last video in this stuff and I wanna make them.
Ooh shiny :) those look awesome and I very much want to make my own in the future
They turned out great, and it's super easy! You'll rock it :)
@@Rybonator need to get some experience before I try this but I think I could do this really soon, it looks quite easy
The SkillShare saga continues! Such a fun set of voices to choose from!
It would be cool to see more video game inspired dice sets, your minecraft ones looked awesome.
A strange game-based dice suggestion of mine would be dice based on The Binding of Isaac, where inside clear dice, there could be polymer clay sculptures of the various items and consumables from the game.
The irony is that there are DnD dice in the game as items.
I painted a Necron Army with the liquid chrome, and I can tell you that thing is really hard to properly work with it. You have to airbrush it, but with brush you can make certain parts to shine really good, however is reaaaaaally easy to accidentally buff the paint and it instantly loses it's shine. it took me severall tries to get it right.
I love this!
I just went to a convention and I saw a vendor selling stickers and they had one with your logo on it. I was like cool!
Have you conidered filling a mold up half way, letting it cure, adding the liquid mirror, let it cure and then fill up the rest with clear resin so it looks like there's a mirror sheen in the middle of the dice? No idea if it would work but it's where my mind went during the video
Neat idea!
Love your stuff Rybo : )
Thanks Serban :D You rock
For the clear dice I'd try 2 layers of paint.
Bright contrasting color in the numbers which then gets covered by the chrome.
From the outside it looks the same but when looking at the other dice faces through the clear resin there will be some color bouncing about due to the base layer under the chromed numbers.
Might be already mentioned, but I guess the uncured resin comes from the corners of your cups. Your mixing sticks are round, try to find something with a nice 90° corner. I use some bamboo sticks for food stuff, they have a little handle section to hold them, that is a nice paddle like shape to use for mixing.
I wonder if you could use the refill as the liquid in one of the swirling center dice? The chrome seems to thin out significantly when added to the resin itself, but I wonder if it wasn't diluted if it would keep more of the chrome effect as opposed to becoming micah-like?
I think it would coat the plastic insert, making it too hard to see unfortunately :/
These look like storms set into the dice! So cool!
i was kinda hopingfor a liquid core dice after reading the title, but DAMN i wasnt dissapointed either. these look amazing!
The hype is real!
WHAT UP BEEBS
@@Rybonator workin’ :3 definitely NOT researching other possible ways to create mirror dice during my break time. (
You should try double layered inkings with clear dice. Like a deep blue or red first then the silver layer on top. The outside would be the same as these, but there'd be more color inside the dice.
These hecking futuristic dice!!!!! I love them!!!!
Have you seen the one dice where you take shiny paper and fold a dice to put into a clear one? That could give you a mirror affect. Buuuuuuuut I’m actually really curious to see if you can make one using pigments like this!!!!
You should try mirror chrome powders (usually used for nails)! It does indeed come in gold.
Best bet would probably be to either rub into the molds before pouring resin, or cast clear dice, rub the powder on top once the resin is cured and then do a thin top coat (brushed on UV resin should work!)
These powders are ment to be used buffed onto gel top coats and then clear coated. Gel nail polished are made of a type of resin.
So should work!
very sparkly :D As an idea, I keep seeing dice done with inserts where the inserts are put in blanks first, then the blanks put into the dice. Would be curious to see how to do such dice from start to finish and why they're useful.
there have been chrome nail polishes around for a while and they have an issue with clear top coats to protect the mirror finish. just a heads up. if whatever you use shrinks when drying/curing you might disrupt the chrome layer and ruin the finish.
Love the auditions
Those people killed it :)
is there a reason you no longer use the hanging molds? you seemed to like those and they made less of a mess.
Honestly the post work (sanding etc.) is just easier on cap molds. I'd say most of the time, I only end up having to sand the d20 and d10's for cap molds, where I have to sand all sides on all dice for hanging molds.
There is a gilding marker from edding that does the same with shiny gold and a shiny zilver mirror paint
OHHHHH looking into that now!
Krylon has a good one too should be easier to find in the USA ^_^ (18kt gold leafing pen)
I wonder if there is something removable you could paint into the numbers, then put the shiny stuff all over, remove the numbers, and paint them something else (or leave them clear)
The long dry time with liquid chrome is so that it can settle to a smooth finish