Very smart! I love your explanations. I have made some infinity mirror tables. Rather than having two way mirrors done, I used mirror film. It is relatively inexpensive and easy to apply. I plan to use your method to build a book nook too! Thank you.
Why are the comments so mean and nitpicky-? I enjoyed the video :D Everyone does things their own way and learn as they create newer pieces. Keep up the good work
Agree. And some of the “advice “ is not advisable. For instance, hot glue is temperature sensitive. And, as a person who binds real books, I loved the detail you put into the books. It gives wonderful authenticity to the project.
As impressive as all of those individual are you could have saved yourself a lot of time and effort by making just a few of those and making the rest as a large block of Styrofoam with just the book spines glued on the front.
I bought the normal mirror (the one on the back) at a local construction store (they would cut it to a specific size). The two-sided mirror I ordered here: www.twowaymirrors.com
Now that I think of it, I probably could, but I wasn't sure it will hold it strong enough, so I used the strongest thing I had (the liquid nail). Plus whenever I use hot glue - it gets super messy.
Huge amounts of way to powerful glue for the application. Three dots on the side of the mirror would have sufficed. Completely ridiculous. It’s a fun project but you can drop it from a plane and it won’t damage.
@@trinketcorner376 There's a guy (channel is Joel Creates) who's in the process of making "functional" Spider-man web shooters, since there's no such thing as web fluid he's using hot glue. In the process of checking out how strong it actually is he escalated his tests, from small things to bigger things to dressing his sister as a robber and sticking her on a wall to eventually sticking some belt things to the sides of his car and using that to literally lift it off the ground. All with just copious amounts of hot glue. The amount of hot glue he used to glue his sister to the wall completely off the ground looked about similar to what you used here, except on a much bigger surface. Yeah, it was a tiiiiiiiny bit too much :P But hey, good news! That won't come apart any soon! :D
Very smart! I love your explanations. I have made some infinity mirror tables. Rather than having two way mirrors done, I used mirror film. It is relatively inexpensive and easy to apply. I plan to use your method to build a book nook too! Thank you.
It was such a smart idea!! I love the care with detail in making all individual lil books, they are so cute :3
This was a really good video. Nice clear description of what you were doing and why. Loved it. :}
Why are the comments so mean and nitpicky-?
I enjoyed the video :D
Everyone does things their own way and learn as they create newer pieces.
Keep up the good work
Agree. And some of the “advice “ is not advisable. For instance, hot glue is temperature sensitive. And, as a person who binds real books, I loved the detail you put into the books. It gives wonderful authenticity to the project.
you put the hinges in backwards
As impressive as all of those individual are you could have saved yourself a lot of time and effort by making just a few of those and making the rest as a large block of Styrofoam with just the book spines glued on the front.
Where do you get those mirrors?
I bought the normal mirror (the one on the back) at a local construction store (they would cut it to a specific size).
The two-sided mirror I ordered here: www.twowaymirrors.com
Could you have used hot glue to hold the mirror?
Now that I think of it, I probably could, but I wasn't sure it will hold it strong enough, so I used the strongest thing I had (the liquid nail). Plus whenever I use hot glue - it gets super messy.
Huge amounts of way to powerful glue for the application. Three dots on the side of the mirror would have sufficed. Completely ridiculous. It’s a fun project but you can drop it from a plane and it won’t damage.
I just don't know when to stop with the glue :D Guilty)
@@trinketcorner376 There's a guy (channel is Joel Creates) who's in the process of making "functional" Spider-man web shooters, since there's no such thing as web fluid he's using hot glue. In the process of checking out how strong it actually is he escalated his tests, from small things to bigger things to dressing his sister as a robber and sticking her on a wall to eventually sticking some belt things to the sides of his car and using that to literally lift it off the ground. All with just copious amounts of hot glue.
The amount of hot glue he used to glue his sister to the wall completely off the ground looked about similar to what you used here, except on a much bigger surface.
Yeah, it was a tiiiiiiiny bit too much :P
But hey, good news! That won't come apart any soon! :D