😯C'est très beau ce que vous faites ! Bravo l'artiste ! J'adore le mélange des couleurs! Chaque pièce,chaque vase, chaque petite toile, à la fin est unique. Aucun produit obtenu ne ressemble à l'autre,mais ils forment tous une unité, quand on les mettent ensembles ! Bon job ! 👍👍👍👏👏👏😘🙋
Thank you so much!! I love my vases! I am wondering if you ever have a challenge with paint separating? Also, I use glittery paint and got no shine. It wasn’t worth the extra money. I really appreciate your video. My coasters didn’t fully get covered with resin, your comments helped a lot. I’m trying a different resin!
I've used paints that would crack as it dried if that's what you mean by separating. Sometimes I like that look though. The first vase I did had that happen. When the resin doesn't fully cover our coasters we just sand the top a little bit after they are fully cured and pour some more resin on them. That fixes the problem. Glad you enjoyed the video! 😁
Looks great! You really don't need that much resin on the vases. Just a little and pull it down in a thin coat all over the vase. It turns out just as good and you use way less resin.
Beautyful. If you use a exacto knife to your drips after they have drained about 6-8 hours the drips are easy to get off. Clean them up with a little acetone.
The results comes out great, pretty colors combination. Can I paint like this and pour resin in a cement vase? Also do I really need to use the fire gum? What is the objective to heat the resin?.
I don't know how the paint would look over a cement vase. Because cement is porous I'm not sure how the paint would react with it. The torch pops any bubbles that may be in the resin.
Sorry to butt in but maybe I am misunderstanding...if you use just reain and color the reain with the acrylic paint, the torch/heat gun/ blow dryer can also help make some amazing cells just like how acrylic does on its own. Have fun!
I don't know if anyone has mentioned it already or not but you could use liquid latex around the lip of the vase and simply peel the drips off with the latex when it's cured.
I love this video, the vases and coasters turned out beautiful. I was wondering what ratio you mix your resin ? I did some and it started to harden before I got the finish I hoped for, could you please help me? I have a vase I did lady week and want to resin it. Thank you for sharing video it was great,any imput would do help as well.
We just followed the instructions on the bottle. Some resins we're 1 part resin 1 part hardener. Others had different ratios. I recommend following the instructions exactly.
It's a paint additive that lets the paint flow better. It's designed to reduce brush strokes and help with paint leveling. Unlike water, Floetrol won't ruin the integrity of the paint. It won't dilute the color and won't reduce the bonding ability of the paint to whatever surface is being painted. This is why people use it for fluid painting or paint pours. Professionals use it to achieve a smooth surface for walls, trim, cabinets, basically anything that you'd want a smooth surface.
If you want to spend a bunch of time watching the resin cure then you could possibly prevent drips, as in removing the drips as they happen until the resin is hard enough to stop dripping. We sand them off after it's fully cured and for the most part it doesn't need fixed after but I like to spray some glossy spray enamel on a gloved finger and rub it over the sanded surface.
You can prevent them by just running a popcicle stick around the rim about every 20 minutes to 1/2 hour until it sets up enough to not drip. A lot easier than sanding and having a rough top edge that still has bumps from trying to sand.
I don't remember what resin we used on these but we like Total Boat epoxy resin. We order it online. It comes with pumps for both parts and has directions on how to mix it.
Most resins need around 48 hours to fully cure. Let it sit untouched for at least 48 hours. I find that after that, even though the resin is cured, the vase sometimes will stick to hard surfaces but that will go away over time. Hope this helps.
I'm not sure. I think it depends on what type of resin you use. Some resins are made to be more resilient to higher temperatures. I've never put anything hotter than a coffee mug on them so I'm not sure how this resin would hold up.
Floetrol is used for thinning the paint, making it more fluid so it can be poured. Using just water to accomplish that will dilute the color of the paint and it could crack or peel when drying.
I'm so frustrated, I applied resin on two vases, and the morning after my meticulous application there are still some spots I missed. I guess I'll have to sand them and reapply?
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures this was gorgeous! I wanted to let you know that one thing you can do about the edges after sanding is to use a brush and brush on a thin coat of the resin around the rim and then set it directly on silicone or parchment paper when you are done to let it dry. The resin will not stick to the wax paper at all and you will get the same glossy finish the rest of your piece has. Wasn't sure if you had figured out a way to do this yet so thought I'd slip that in there!
@@rezinate1700 That's a good idea. We usually spray some clear spray enamel on a gloved finger and rub it along the edge just to seal it but we will have to try your suggestion sometime. Thanks for the idea.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures thank you for your reply. I have so many coasters, and I guess I need to try to sell them, just don’t know where or how to start.
@@pennybaroli2145 That is an issue for us and our vases and paintings. We rent a space at a local Consignment shop but the art really doesn't sell there. I'm glad that our coasters do though. We thought about an Etsy page for the art but we don't know where to begin with it. Also trying to figure out how to ship large stretched canvas paintings isn't easy.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures I know , my holiday coasters sold good by word of mouth. I guess I have to do Etsy as well. When I get it figured out I will let you know what to do. My friend knows of a couple places I will find out. Did you think about just doing a store of your own online. We can figure it out together. lol
If u started to not feel good after u resined the vases and coasters u might want to wear respirators while doing resin. It's toxic even if it says no odors.
I just resined my first vase. It had a couple bald spots. I will sand. And try another coat. Well see. And I accidentally bought a 15 minute work time resin. What a mess.
Around $20 depending on the size of the vase. They don't sell very well in our area and we don't have an online store so we decided to stop making them.
I work with resin and I can tell you that there are sooooo many types of reain out there it is crazy. It is all about what you are wanting to do. If you are coating something or "resin pour" painting then you want a doing and coating resin. They also have artists casting resin to make objects with a little depth, like jewelry, little dishes, etc. Then you also have deep pour resin which is for casting molds deeper than around 6 inch or more. If your using resin for artistic purposes you normally want a resin that has a longer working time. It will all be on the bottle or box of resin you get and you want to follow the directions to a T because most resin has to be mixed with 2 separate parts and if mixed incorrectly will not cure correctly or at all for that matter. Have fun!
@@rezinate1700 Hi Jessica. Thank you for this information. I'm new to using paint like this (or painting of any kind really) so it is incredibly helpful! From your experience, are there some resins that are more safe to use than others in a "confined" space? I've done a few of my own vases like this, would love to do more pouring and then resin, but I live in an apartment without even a balcony so anything I do will only be beside an open window. I'm worried about fumes but finding respirators in this age of covid is understandably impossible right now. But even if I had a respirator, would still need to live here so... not sure if there is a solution. If you have any insight, I'd appreciate accessing your knowledge. And to the Inexperienced Adventurers... can I ask what your experience has been with the Envirotex Lite? Does it seem quite toxic? Thanks for posting your videos. I've loved watching and learning! I appreciate you sharing your processes. Thank you kindly. Stay safe and be well!
@@MaCheriMarie absolutely! There are types that would be "better" yes. Anything that says no VOC and low odor is going to be soooo much better. I would still suggest some form of mask and not getting your face right over your mixing cups. Envirotex from my understanding is good when it comes ro its fumes but it depends on your project. It yellows easier over time than other resins for projects like jewelry. If your are going to be coloring it though that problem goes away. I personally say Art Resin brand resin, Unicone, or there is Counter DIY company that is awesome too and all of those you can get on Amazon in different sizes. They are each better suited for different projects (i.e., casting, coatibg pour painting). Art Resin is a good beginner one I say because it has a fairly long working time, and it is pretty versatile with the different projects you can make as well as very simple 1:1 mixing ratio. Any questions please feel free to ask! Happy to point you to some VERY useful articles when it comes to this have a blast!
WOW. Thank you so much.
😯C'est très beau ce que vous faites ! Bravo l'artiste ! J'adore le mélange des couleurs! Chaque pièce,chaque vase, chaque petite toile, à la fin est unique. Aucun produit obtenu ne ressemble à l'autre,mais ils forment tous une unité, quand on les mettent ensembles ! Bon job ! 👍👍👍👏👏👏😘🙋
I so love your show. I dont have a place big enough to do any of that kind of pouring. Ive gotten into painting vases.
Very nice...
Love these!!!!! I will definitely try your colour choices!
You answered my question. Thank you for your show.
These are beautiful. Thanks for sharing!!!
Looks good with the drips left on
Thank you so much!! I love my vases! I am wondering if you ever have a challenge with paint separating? Also, I use glittery paint and got no shine. It wasn’t worth the extra money. I really appreciate your video. My coasters didn’t fully get covered with resin, your comments helped a lot. I’m trying a different resin!
I've used paints that would crack as it dried if that's what you mean by separating. Sometimes I like that look though. The first vase I did had that happen. When the resin doesn't fully cover our coasters we just sand the top a little bit after they are fully cured and pour some more resin on them. That fixes the problem. Glad you enjoyed the video! 😁
Your work is just gorgeous. I hope I can do some of what you teach I still new to this craft. The coasters are stunning.
I have confidence you can do it.
Beautiful beautiful beautiful beautiful beautiful beautiful
There all so beautiful.
Looks great! You really don't need that much resin on the vases. Just a little and pull it down in a thin coat all over the vase. It turns out just as good and you use way less resin.
Beautyful. If you use a exacto knife to your drips after they have drained about 6-8 hours the drips are easy to get off. Clean them up with a little acetone.
Oh I love this. That purple is so awesome and the lines! Great job! LIKED AND SUBBED :)
Thank you and thanks for supporting the channel! 👍🙂
Wow
These are awesome!
I would heat the resin drips first and cut off with a utility knife before sanding.
Спасибо за видео, очень вдохновилась, можно ли просто покрыть акриловым лаком?
Just gorgeous!! Would you consider putting rocks under your tiles to paint rocks? I do that. Your art is lovely.
We never considered trying that.
The results comes out great, pretty colors combination. Can I paint like this and pour resin in a cement vase? Also do I really need to use the fire gum? What is the objective to heat the resin?.
I don't know how the paint would look over a cement vase. Because cement is porous I'm not sure how the paint would react with it. The torch pops any bubbles that may be in the resin.
Sorry to butt in but maybe I am misunderstanding...if you use just reain and color the reain with the acrylic paint, the torch/heat gun/ blow dryer can also help make some amazing cells just like how acrylic does on its own. Have fun!
The fire popps the bubbles from the resin
I don't know if anyone has mentioned it already or not but you could use liquid latex around the lip of the vase and simply peel the drips off with the latex when it's cured.
❤ From Sweden 🇸🇪❣
I resin my vases. They turn out beautifully
What does the resin do?
Do you need to use a torch after or not? And how do u mix the reson
Lindíssimo 👏
I love this video, the vases and coasters turned out beautiful. I was wondering what ratio you mix your resin ? I did some and it started to harden before I got the finish I hoped for, could you please help me? I have a vase I did lady week and want to resin it. Thank you for sharing video it was great,any imput would do help as well.
We just followed the instructions on the bottle. Some resins we're 1 part resin 1 part hardener. Others had different ratios. I recommend following the instructions exactly.
How do you protect the color? What do you cover the vase with after it dries?
Some of them I used epoxy resin and others I used a spray enamel made by Rust-Oleum.
Thanks!
what's the reason behind the butane lighter? i want to start doing this as a hobby
It pulls out any bubbles that may be in the paint.
What is FLOO/PPG FLD6-04 Floetrol Additive ? Where and How to use it ?
It's a paint additive that lets the paint flow better. It's designed to reduce brush strokes and help with paint leveling. Unlike water, Floetrol won't ruin the integrity of the paint. It won't dilute the color and won't reduce the bonding ability of the paint to whatever surface is being painted. This is why people use it for fluid painting or paint pours. Professionals use it to achieve a smooth surface for walls, trim, cabinets, basically anything that you'd want a smooth surface.
WHAT COLORS DID YOU USE IN THE SECOND VASE ? IT IS BEAUTIFUL
Thank you. I believe the colors are at the beginning of the video. It was so long ago I don't remember.
Your vases came out GREAT !!!!! Which resin are y'all using ?
We are using Envirotex Lite. It's something we found at our local hardware store. It's the cheapest we could find. Still not cheap though haha.
AWESOME SAUCE, I JUST SUBSCRIBED
What do you do about the dried drips .
I want to paint glass solid black or white. What do you recommend?
For that I would recommend just using spray paint. Seems like that would be the easiest way to get a solid color.
Супер.!
How can you prevent the resin from dripping? How would you fix it after sanding
If you want to spend a bunch of time watching the resin cure then you could possibly prevent drips, as in removing the drips as they happen until the resin is hard enough to stop dripping. We sand them off after it's fully cured and for the most part it doesn't need fixed after but I like to spray some glossy spray enamel on a gloved finger and rub it over the sanded surface.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures ok thank you
You can prevent them by just running a popcicle stick around the rim about every 20 minutes to 1/2 hour until it sets up enough to not drip. A lot easier than sanding and having a rough top edge that still has bumps from trying to sand.
Wht resin did you use and where can I get it? Does it tell you how to mix it? Or it premixed already
I don't remember what resin we used on these but we like Total Boat epoxy resin. We order it online. It comes with pumps for both parts and has directions on how to mix it.
Hi. Could someone please tell me if the case is supposed to feel sticky a few hours after adding resin?
Most resins need around 48 hours to fully cure. Let it sit untouched for at least 48 hours. I find that after that, even though the resin is cured, the vase sometimes will stick to hard surfaces but that will go away over time. Hope this helps.
Can the coasters be used as a hot plate?
I'm not sure. I think it depends on what type of resin you use. Some resins are made to be more resilient to higher temperatures. I've never put anything hotter than a coffee mug on them so I'm not sure how this resin would hold up.
Did you guys swirl or layer the paint in the cup before pouring on the vase?
We did layer it in the cup.
How did you get the paint off of the rim of vase? And the resin off of rim? Thank you
After everything is dried I use an orbital palm sander.
The Inexperienced Adventures thank you very much 👍👍
what do you use floetrol for ?
Floetrol is used for thinning the paint, making it more fluid so it can be poured. Using just water to accomplish that will dilute the color of the paint and it could crack or peel when drying.
I'm so frustrated, I applied resin on two vases, and the morning after my meticulous application there are still some spots I missed. I guess I'll have to sand them and reapply?
That's what I have done before. Just make sure it's clean before reapplying the resin.
Did you prime the tile coasters with anything? Base white paint?
No we didn't. Paint right on the coaster.
What do you do with the back side of your coasters? I am thinking of trying this out.
You guys do a great job ! Love your videos!
We glue cork to the back. check out our vlog adventures playlists. Ep 13 shows us finishing some.
How much resin did it take to seal all of that?
Do you sand down the top where the resin dried or just leave it ?
We sand it down with a palm sander.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures this was gorgeous! I wanted to let you know that one thing you can do about the edges after sanding is to use a brush and brush on a thin coat of the resin around the rim and then set it directly on silicone or parchment paper when you are done to let it dry. The resin will not stick to the wax paper at all and you will get the same glossy finish the rest of your piece has. Wasn't sure if you had figured out a way to do this yet so thought I'd slip that in there!
@@rezinate1700 That's a good idea. We usually spray some clear spray enamel on a gloved finger and rub it along the edge just to seal it but we will have to try your suggestion sometime. Thanks for the idea.
Bonjour pourriez-vous me dire où je peux acheter la même résine que vous utiliser merci
Do you sell the coasters and the vase as a set. Or seperate
We sell them separately. The coasters sell pretty well. The vases don't really sell.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures thank you for your reply. I have so many coasters, and I guess I need to try to sell them, just don’t know where
or how to start.
@@pennybaroli2145 That is an issue for us and our vases and paintings. We rent a space at a local Consignment shop but the art really doesn't sell there. I'm glad that our coasters do though. We thought about an Etsy page for the art but we don't know where to begin with it. Also trying to figure out how to ship large stretched canvas paintings isn't easy.
@@TheInexperiencedAdventures I know , my holiday coasters sold good by word of mouth. I guess I have to do Etsy as well. When I get it figured out I will let you know what to do. My friend knows of a couple places I will find out. Did you think about just doing a store of your own online. We can figure it out together. lol
Did you paint the inside of the vase?
Nope. Just the outside 👍🙂
How do you remove the top drip of vase?
I use a palm sander to sand the drips off.
If u started to not feel good after u resined the vases and coasters u might want to wear respirators while doing resin. It's toxic even if it says no odors.
I just resined my first vase. It had a couple bald spots. I will sand. And try another coat. Well see. And I accidentally bought a 15 minute work time resin. What a mess.
The second coat covered all my spots. Yours will too, I'm sure.
So how much do u sell these for?????
Around $20 depending on the size of the vase. They don't sell very well in our area and we don't have an online store so we decided to stop making them.
what resin do you use? Does it matter?
I work with resin and I can tell you that there are sooooo many types of reain out there it is crazy. It is all about what you are wanting to do. If you are coating something or "resin pour" painting then you want a doing and coating resin. They also have artists casting resin to make objects with a little depth, like jewelry, little dishes, etc. Then you also have deep pour resin which is for casting molds deeper than around 6 inch or more. If your using resin for artistic purposes you normally want a resin that has a longer working time. It will all be on the bottle or box of resin you get and you want to follow the directions to a T because most resin has to be mixed with 2 separate parts and if mixed incorrectly will not cure correctly or at all for that matter. Have fun!
@@rezinate1700 Hi Jessica. Thank you for this information. I'm new to using paint like this (or painting of any kind really) so it is incredibly helpful! From your experience, are there some resins that are more safe to use than others in a "confined" space? I've done a few of my own vases like this, would love to do more pouring and then resin, but I live in an apartment without even a balcony so anything I do will only be beside an open window. I'm worried about fumes but finding respirators in this age of covid is understandably impossible right now. But even if I had a respirator, would still need to live here so... not sure if there is a solution. If you have any insight, I'd appreciate accessing your knowledge.
And to the Inexperienced Adventurers... can I ask what your experience has been with the Envirotex Lite? Does it seem quite toxic? Thanks for posting your videos. I've loved watching and learning! I appreciate you sharing your processes.
Thank you kindly. Stay safe and be well!
@@MaCheriMarie absolutely! There are types that would be "better" yes. Anything that says no VOC and low odor is going to be soooo much better. I would still suggest some form of mask and not getting your face right over your mixing cups.
Envirotex from my understanding is good when it comes ro its fumes but it depends on your project. It yellows easier over time than other resins for projects like jewelry. If your are going to be coloring it though that problem goes away. I personally say Art Resin brand resin, Unicone, or there is Counter DIY company that is awesome too and all of those you can get on Amazon in different sizes. They are each better suited for different projects (i.e., casting, coatibg pour painting). Art Resin is a good beginner one I say because it has a fairly long working time, and it is pretty versatile with the different projects you can make as well as very simple 1:1 mixing ratio. Any questions please feel free to ask! Happy to point you to some VERY useful articles when it comes to this have a blast!
Sorry. I accidentally unsubscribed you guys 😝
Call me ocd.. idgas.. Corners should always be complete and not uncovered
Quit w/ the music. Ur video is great but.....
Don't watch or turn it down
EXACTLY!! DON'T WATCH, PAY 2 GO 2 AN ART EXPO!!