I love this! I'm not a fan of the 15min challenge you do, only because its such a long video and im not able to do lives most of the time. (kids got me running like a chicken with it head cut off), but I love these tutorials. Short sweet to the point and great directions. You are so enthusiastic its awesome. Defiantly makes the end of my day better.
You make Canva look so easy to use. I’ll be trying it “again”. sooner than later on a new project. Thank you for the clear and easy to follow videos. You’re awesome!
Michael, love the tumbler. Thank you so much for your time and patience. Would you consider doing more tutorials on Canva? I would really appreciate it. 💜
Thank you so much for your time and your teaching you're helping me out a lot I appreciate it this is therapy for me I got shot three times and this is this Cricket is helping me get better
I would love to see you do the colored water bottles I can’t find white anywhere but I did find the colored ones I’m not sure what type of design will show up 🤷🏽♀️
I'm wondering about that too. Glass, even frosted glass, is inert and not permeable into the material so I'm wondering how the ink is binding and how long it will last. Some glass goods are, however, sprayed with a frost coating, which is probably what this is otherwise it wouldn't work.
Thank you so much for doing a video with these, I made 2 of them and they turned out okay, but not amazing like yours! Thank you so so much for all your videos 🥰
What heat source did you use? If you sub in an oven you have to sleeve them with shrink wrap or a silicone sleeve. With a press or oven you also have to tape right well!
Another great tutorial Id love to learn some of the "extra" tricks in Canva. Hope you consider a tutorial, especially to be able to print a 16x20 with a epson 2720 so I can make some puzzles without having white boarders.
I've looked into this, and every resource I've seen states the frosted glass vessel--mug, tumbler, whatever --must ne coated. Glass is inert and not permeable, so even if the ink initially "sticks," there is no chemical reaction/infusing occuring with plain glass. Even the sources that explain the process using their commercial coated frosted blanks recommend gentle hand washing. Could you please detail exactly what the surface of this bottle is--there are frosted coatings that are sprayed on glass and there are glasses with chemically or mechanically etched surfaces. I'm guessing this is a bottle with a frost coating, otherwise the sub wouldn't work. Most crafters aren't very technical so being explicit about this is important for them. Thanks!
I sublimated a lot of these a few months ago, it's a frost coating. I highly recommend hand washing. I have taken a scrub brush to some that I have sublimated as a test and not had any issues. The bottles frost coating can be scratched/scraped off like anything else and remove the image with the coating of course. With proper care they are fine. Hand wash in warm or cool water and treat the way you would any glass container. Hope this helps.
"Just me being extra, Go figure" That made me giggle!! Keep doing what you do!! I love the videos and am always learning!!
I love this! I'm not a fan of the 15min challenge you do, only because its such a long video and im not able to do lives most of the time. (kids got me running like a chicken with it head cut off), but I love these tutorials. Short sweet to the point and great directions. You are so enthusiastic its awesome. Defiantly makes the end of my day better.
Thanks for demonstrating using an inexpensive WalMart frosted waterbottle! I wish I had access to a sublimation printer and that mug press.
You make Canva look so easy to use. I’ll be trying it “again”. sooner than later on a new project. Thank you for the clear and easy to follow videos. You’re awesome!
Michael, love the tumbler. Thank you so much for your time and patience. Would you consider doing more tutorials on Canva? I would really appreciate it. 💜
Thank you so much for your time and your teaching you're helping me out a lot I appreciate it this is therapy for me I got shot three times and this is this Cricket is helping me get better
Great tutorial! Straight to the point no 100’s of y’all’s and I’m here for it whatever that means! Loved how it turned out!
I would love to see you do the colored water bottles I can’t find white anywhere but I did find the colored ones I’m not sure what type of design will show up 🤷🏽♀️
I have some of those from Walmart. Thanks for the demonstration with yours 😘👍💕💕
love it Michael!! ❤❤
I'm in love with Canva too since I started watching your tutorials!!
I love your channel!
Watched replay thank you again
I always love everything you do.
If you converted the printer, how the ink doesn't get dry?
Awesome project, except these water bottles are currently unavailable online or at stores near me. :(
This turned out really cute!
That is so cute!!
Thank you for the little tips in Canva! I am definitely going to try this next time!
It literally looks like u purchased it that way! Looks so good and professional! Would def be a great item to sell or gift to someone!
Love this idea! My Walmart is out of those bottles but hopefully they will be back soon so I can try for myself.
Thank you so much for this very informative tutorial video. I especially appreciated all your advice in Canva !
Another informative video! Thank you! I just wish these weren't completely sold out online already :(
Can you do a tutorial with the glass can using uv dtf
of you can Sublimate on these, there must be a Poly coating?, just curious!
I'm wondering about that too. Glass, even frosted glass, is inert and not permeable into the material so I'm wondering how the ink is binding and how long it will last.
Some glass goods are, however, sprayed with a frost coating, which is probably what this is otherwise it wouldn't work.
Awesome I will be looking for that tumbler at Walmart
Another great video. Thanks for the great information
Very pretty
Thank you for all the info. It came out amazing.
Great project!
Thank you again loved it ❤️
😲 Love it! 🥰
I'm new at sublimation....where can I find my images...an can u do a video on how to save an open them using a windows computer.....thanks
Thank you so much for doing a video with these, I made 2 of them and they turned out okay, but not amazing like yours! Thank you so so much for all your videos 🥰
What heat source did you use? If you sub in an oven you have to sleeve them with shrink wrap or a silicone sleeve. With a press or oven you also have to tape right well!
This is awesome thanks so much
Another great tutorial
Id love to learn some of the "extra" tricks in Canva. Hope you consider a tutorial, especially to be able to print a 16x20 with a epson 2720 so I can make some puzzles without having white boarders.
That printer's max printing size is 8.5 x 14 inches. Large format printers are very expensive. You would have to piece the design for anything larger.
So is the tumbler not a sublimation type just a frosted tumbler?
Can we use a cricket mug press
where does time fly to? One min it was 6 & the next I missed the premiere-video! Michael (MCP) the tumbler looks good!
Gutted I can't make use of the 143vinyl discount
Can’t find these tumblers at any Walmart stores in my area! Ohio
Nice tutorial, but I thought true sub only happened on poly. How is this sub, just picking a random painted bottle at Walmart?
I've looked into this, and every resource I've seen states the frosted glass vessel--mug, tumbler, whatever --must ne coated.
Glass is inert and not permeable, so even if the ink initially "sticks," there is no chemical reaction/infusing occuring with plain glass.
Even the sources that explain the process using their commercial coated frosted blanks recommend gentle hand washing.
Could you please detail exactly what the surface of this bottle is--there are frosted coatings that are sprayed on glass and there are glasses with chemically or mechanically etched surfaces. I'm guessing this is a bottle with a frost coating, otherwise the sub wouldn't work.
Most crafters aren't very technical so being explicit about this is important for them.
Thanks!
I sublimated a lot of these a few months ago, it's a frost coating. I highly recommend hand washing. I have taken a scrub brush to some that I have sublimated as a test and not had any issues. The bottles frost coating can be scratched/scraped off like anything else and remove the image with the coating of course. With proper care they are fine. Hand wash in warm or cool water and treat the way you would any glass container. Hope this helps.
Taunt? Lol 😆