Good Morning... ☕️ I’m so thrilled to launch this video. It’s taken me over 3 years to make it. I’m excited to hear your tips and tricks too. Let’s make this video and this comment section the ultimate guide for Art Resin and Rocks! Let’s hear what you know ♥️ Don’t forget to subscribe and hit the like button so UA-cam knows you like my videos. That’s the stuff that makes that old algorithm share my videos to more people. Thank you ♥️ Rock on… ua-cam.com/users/JaDeLRocks
I paint rocks in memory of my son, Herbie, I place them in places I wish he was with me, this has brought me so much peace and you have helped encourage me. Thank you
I’m so happy to be apart of that if only in the smallest way of encouragement. How special is what you do. I’m more than sorry for your loss. Rock on, my friend… rock on!!! ♥️
Helpful video! I use small medicine dose cups to pour my small-batch of resin into. They have various measurements on them to keep me accurate. I also use a silicone stirring stick which I just wipe off on my glove before my 1st stone. Any left over resin just peels off. For dust free(cat hair free in my house) drying, try a cake/baking pan with a lid. This keeps the dust out and you can move the rocks around easily. I use a sheet pan with a lid for tile magnets I paint.
Good morning Obie Wan 😅 GREAT VIDEO! I have learned from a handful of UA-cam artists that using a wooden stir stick causes bubbles in the resin. They say always use a plastic stir stick. Well, if I ever get a place in my cluttered home to resin my rocks, I’ll try both and let you know.
Thank you ♥️ I’ve tried them both and even a silicone one.. bubbles come from stirring but it’s perfectly fine because they pop so easy. I picked wood to cut plastic usage but… I’ve used the same stick for like 2 years now so I think a plastic one would be reusable too. If you find it works better let me know ♥️ you rock Kat!!
I have used many brands of resin, and they all have their uses, but I can confirm that "Art Resin" is the best for using on rocks. Now, I live up North in Canada and we get hot sun in the summer but I don't think the rays are as strong as in Arkanses, so I would say that location can also playing into using it for outside as well, My rocks have held up pretty good in the flower beds, but I have also packed them up for winter sometimes when I have had the time, and they are still pretty glossy... I definitely would not recommend using Mod Podge alone for outside rocks , that will not hold up to the elements at all... I think this video is the best for explain and lots of great tips, I am going to try the toothpick method as I usually use a silicone mat to set my rocks on but it gets all grit and needs a good cleaning after awhile... (not fun), but this Vaseline trick is ingenious, can't wait to try it out, total game changer ...thank you JaDel, this video is very informative, and I think beginners will appreciate it immensely...
Thanks for the tips Sandra. It’s nice to hear how it works in different parts of the world for sure. I hope this works out for you. I haven’t fixed a rock yet thanks to that petroleum jelly idea from Linda C. Brilliant ♥️
Great video as always! ❤ My one tip that I use is mixing my resin over a hot water bath. (Just a plastic container with hot water) the heat scares away any bubbles. Less to deal with once applied. :) I still use a torch for the small ones we can’t see.
Great tip! Thank you ♥️ I must admit off camera I hold the paper cup to my leg and in my left hand just for heat 🤣😂 it seems to help. Y’all are so smart with the water.
Excellent video and FANTASTIC tips!! The petroleum jelly tip…..WOW!! A tip I picked up from a video is to use a clear glass or plastic measuring cup to pour your resin in when using larger amounts. So if u need 1/2 cup resin, you would pour 1/4 cup of resin into the measuring cup, then add the hardener to the 1/2 cup mark and stir. This eliminates leaving behind any resin or hardener when scraping out two separate containers. Also rubbing alcohol cleans up the measuring cup and any tools you use so no sticky residue left behind. Another tip for eliminating a lot of bubbles is to use a “hot water bath” when mixing for the 3 minutes. The cup I mix resin in is smaller than a plastic solo cup, so I add hot tap water to a solo cup hold my cup with resin in it just far enough into the solo cup to have the resin in the water. I don’t want to take any chances of splashing water into my resin, so I only use the minimum hot water needed. To be clear, I have only done this with Resin Rockers 1:1 resin and it will speed up the curing time some which means it may shorten the time you have to spread your resin on your pieces, but I have never had it shorten my time enough to hinder my process. I resin wood cut outs and charger plates and have taken up to 45 minutes of spreading the resin without any issues.
All true!! I’ve tried those things too. You’d have laughed at me warming the resin. It began to harden and I was like uhhhhh what the?? I hold my paper cup in my hand and my hand seems to warm it enough… but it’s all a lot of work to reduce bubbles you’re just gonna torch anyhow. I love these tips. See? We are going to have it all right here in this video and comments. Thank you ♥️
Another option is place the resin into a vacuum chamber and using a machine that you can vacuum food for those plastic bags for the freezer, it will vacuum out the bubbles, just don’t use the one for your food. As they are half the price than the ones being sold for doing resin only. I had two machines one I bought for Mom as well as my own one. When I moved back home to help Dad to look after Mom before her passing we ended up with two of most house hold items. So when I watched all the unboxing of the resin vacuum chambers I remember I now have two machines. I also have a vacuum chamber which was for using with dry goods but it got to be a hassle having to vacuum it every time I opened it to grab a handful of the contents. I now use it to vacuum the resin to remove the bubbles.
You are so welcome! I hope it helps. I was terrified myself because there’s some real stories out there. I never found one about this brand so I went for it. I’m just super careful and so far so good.
Wonderful video, full of important information on using resin. It's the most informative video I've seen! Thanks to you, everyone who views this video should be very successful, when using resin on their rocks! ❤
Thank you for posting this! The information is so helpful. I have always struggled with the damage left behind on the backs of the rocks. I saw where someone used the "Scat Cat" garden mats that have little plastic security spikes (they do not actually hurt the animal) and these have worked better than anything I have tried before. But I do love the vaseline trick! Thanks for sharing!
I wondered if the Vaseline will work on those mats too. I’m almost positive it will but I haven’t tried so I didn’t mention. If you try it will you let us know?
I love scat mats. They are great to used with spray paint for a primer layer. It keeps an air layer underneath so some of the over-spray and get under the edges.
Another person I follows make sure that they cover their freshly resined pieces so that no lint gets on them while drying. Also they actually let the resin warm up in hot water for 10 minutes and then after mixing they let it sit for 10 minutes to get rid of the bubbles in the mixture. Whatever works, I guess. Your rocks are gorgeous!!
Awesome tips!!! I need to cover mine for sure. It’s comical here now after the vacuum incident. I’m like… nobody goes in or out in the first 24 hours. It sits atop some drawers and one time I bent over to get access to bottom drawer and my ponytail landed right in a freshly resined rock. My hair got 6 inches shorter that day… facepalm
@@JaDeLRocks this was the full instructions the other artist gave me. Her resin looked like glass! Warm the two bottles in Hot tap water for 10 minutes, measure properly, stir for 3 full minutes, let sit for 10 minutes. Dust off all the pieces with an eye glass cloth then pour on and smooth with a gloved finger, then torch. Then use a toothpick if there are any pieces of lint. Then we cover with a clean lint free cover. Check in 10 minutes to make sure there are no bubbles or any lint that has found it’s way to the piece, if so pick it out with the toothpick, torch again if needed and cover.
Sounds like solid advice. I might be too lazy or rushed to add all those steps for the same results. Im usually going in a thousand directions. However, I should incorporate some sort of dust free cover like that. Thank you ♥️ this might give others ideas 💡 you rock 💪🏻
Gooood morning! I have minimal experience with resin because my projects typically don't need it. I AM, however, staring at a molded stone I'm putting off doing. :-) I have only ever used Art Resin and typically poured it when I did use it. Your tips will come in very handy when I DO get to that stone. I will say, when I used it before, I cleaned up my spoons, cups, and me with hand sanitizer. They cleaned up easily to be used another day. Our FL humidity does pose a challenge in paint AND resin drying. But that heat sure can bend a record album into a pretty banana bowl. 😂 Have a great day!
I can’t wait to see how you do with the stone. The hand sanitizer does work well because of the alcohol content. Clorox wipes or Lysol wipes work great too. I began using Napkins or paper towels when there was a shortage of disinfectants.. it worked well enough that I kept it in use because it’s cheaper and less plastic. I use those wet wipes I showed on my skin if I whoops. You know your stuff lady! Thank you ♥️ this is definitely a tip that works and is useful 😀
@JaDeLRocks ❤️ you'll see my stone soon...just trying to decide which one of your videos to follow :-D I'm thinking one of the green ones since St Paddy's Day is coming soon. It'll take me that long to start it. lol
Thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. To being with, I think your artwork is absolutely stunning!!! But I really want to thank you for your extraordinary tips and tricks. I have been struggling to resin my stones and have been so disappointed with the results to the point of wrecking all my hard work. I can hardly wait to try resining my stones using your methods. I'm very certain I will have much better results!!! I hope you know how profound your sharing has been for me. Hugs
Wow Linda.. that sure means an awful lot to me. Thank you ♥️ if you run into any snags or need anything just let me know. I really appreciate this comment and you taking the time to lead it. Kindness 😊😊😊♥️
awesome video Jadel, your very talented at editing and producing quality tutorials as well as a fantastic artist.... is there any thing you cant do???? lol just kidding . I am just jelly hahaha I dont use resin, yes because im chicken. But I find I love using ultra gloss liquitex varnish on mine. I have never had an issue with leaving my rocks outside. But of course on the west coast of Canada, we do not have extreme heat and extreme cold most of the time it just rains lol Great video as always ❤
I was so glad to find this video. I am just now starting to resin my rocks and the first batch stuck to the surface (aluminum foil) and yes it came off but not without a struggle. thank goodness it didn't ruin the finish. but it was not easy. so thank you for these amazing tips.
This was so helpful. I do resin art and now have started painting rocks! I resined my rocks and had issues with the bases. I ended up putting a felt backing to hide any marks. I will try the petroleum jelly on toothpicks as this looked great! Thank you
Thanks Jadel, I do have this kind of resin, but usually I use the UV kind. Usually takes about 20 minutes in the sun..Also the first time I ever used the 2 part was on my expresso flower and it did get blotchy. Not sure why, I probably mixed it wrong. 😅
Great tips! Subscribed. I paint intricate Celtic interlace on beach stones and have used a tripod method with needles resined into bottle caps, then poked through layered cardboard. While not as beautiful a coat as resin, I have had great luck with Liquitex brush on lacquer to hold up against outdoor conditions. The brand of resin I use I haven't tested for outdoors.
I was so thrilled to find multiple reasons. Everyone always said it must be the mix when I knew it wasn’t. It took me forever to figure out what was going on 😂
Re: splotches in resin finish. Another reason is if you are using any kind of spray paint, like a finish. The gasses can release, causing splotches if not fully cured and dry. I'm not sure if other paints can cause this.
I’ve only heard that liquitex gloss and matte varnish work well. I don’t put very many outside for long. I still use resin. I just put them in indirect sun and hope they’re found.
I don’t have a trick other than doing upkeep. Maybe reapplying. I believe Miranda Pitrone has a video on Liquitex Varnish that she uses. If it’s the video I watched years ago I think she uses it outdoors for 10+ years…. ua-cam.com/video/XF2cb8MTKk0/v-deo.htmlsi=EZP98eJTQU3mA505
@JaDeLRocks I wonder if you could use that over the resin? The epoxy resin they use on boats has to be protected by a uv protection varnish also. Would be worth a try on a test piece.
@Jendolll2012 I’ve only heard that it does yellow and crack but really I think everyone has a negative effect with everything. I think my negative reaction to outdoors with art resin may be just significant to my location. Someone up north may put this stuff out for years and it be fine. I honestly can’t think of a thing that will battle this southern heat and humidity without upkeep. I have a stone on my daddy’s grave that I resin yearly and it’s still perfect. So who’s to say many coats isn’t the trick. There are just many variables to this whole art to explore. I think that’s why I love it. If you try the boat resin I’d love to hear how it goes. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
Liquitex varnish. I watched a video from Miranda Pitrone and that’s what she uses. I still use the resin for my kindness rocks because I figure they will be found and taken in doors. I also have a rock on my dad’s grave that’s shaded and it seems fine. It’s got a couple of coats though.
Totally new to using resin ontop of my rocks I use Acrylic based Paints on my rock and was using Areosal ModPodge over my rocks. But would The resin work well with Acrylic based paints?
@@sarahglenn5046 all of my paints are acrylic. So far the only struggle I’ve had with paint and Art Resin is if I use a chalky finish paint. It’s as if the resin doesn’t want to cover it well. Also, be very sure your paint is dry. If you are using low quality paints like Apple Barrel you will want a quick coat of mod podge first to prevent some vibrant colors like red from running. I don’t have this problem with other brands. Let me know if you need anything further. I don’t mind helping 🤗
So have you used art resin on other surfaces? Like wood, canvas, or acrylic, discs, or plastic Christmas globes? If so, I’d appreciate any tips you have for spreading the resin on the surfaces, especially the flat ones because I know some people use foam brushes, or do it different ways. I have used Krylon triple thick spray on rocks for outdoors and they hold up well in upstate ny year round. Just don’t have a safe way to spray during winter month’s.
I used this same technique on my Christmas ornaments. I just used a small dowel in the styrofoam and put the opening of the ornament on it. I did wooden key chains which I hung to dry. I did a small wooden sign that was flat the exact same as the rocks. It was fine but not as pretty as the ones I see on art resin’s website. The have a UA-cam channel too. You can look up how to resin almost anything there and they give great advice and easy videos. They just didn’t have a rock one… at least not art stones like mine. So I made one. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
I would love to use the Vaseline trick, but I have an allergy to it and just don’t want to risk it around me. As resin self levels I can use a paintbrush and paint it on, now being resin it would ruin any normal paintbrush so I bought a silicon pastry brush and once the resin dries it just peels off the brush and your left with a piece of holy resin and a very clean brush. Once the backs are cured then just turn over the rocks and paint the fronts. Never do it the other way as you really need at least 7 days for resin to be totally cured so you will run the risk of leaving dimples in the resin.
I’m so sorry.. allergies can stink for sure. I’m so happy you found something that works for you. It goes to show where there’s a will there’s a way. 💪🏻
Watch my old video but go on and fast forward towards the end. I didn’t use the Vaseline then either. I show how I’ve fixed them for years. Now I don’t have to but this should help. Good luck.. 🤞🏻 Resin Wow! | How to protect your rocks with Art Resin | How to make rocks shine | Epoxy Resin ua-cam.com/video/iA3t5MKVa2A/v-deo.html
Recently had a customer complain about some of the rocks i used resin on. Shes bringing them back. If it looks like the resin might be at fault i will look for one thats better outside. If you hear of one, i hope to spot your tip another time.
I'm super bummed. I ordered my art resin a few days ago before watching this video. I had fully intended on using it for outdoor rocks. Do you have a recommendation for what to use for outdoor rocks? I live in Indiana. High heat, High humidity 😩 @JaDelRocks
I’m so sorry. A lot of folks use Liquitex Varnish. That’s all I used when I began but I never tested it outdoors. Miranda Pitrone uses it on her outdoor rocks and loves it. Let me see if I can find her video for ya… brb
Just s heads up but the pink filters on your face mask do NOT protect from fumes (the dangerous part of reain). You need VOC filters. The pink ones are for particulates like glitter or mica.
Good Morning... ☕️ I’m so thrilled to launch this video. It’s taken me over 3 years to make it. I’m excited to hear your tips and tricks too. Let’s make this video and this comment section the ultimate guide for Art Resin and Rocks! Let’s hear what you know ♥️
Don’t forget to subscribe and hit the like button so UA-cam knows you like my videos. That’s the stuff that makes that old algorithm share my videos to more people. Thank you ♥️ Rock on…
ua-cam.com/users/JaDeLRocks
I paint rocks in memory of my son, Herbie, I place them in places I wish he was with me, this has brought me so much peace and you have helped encourage me. Thank you
I’m so happy to be apart of that if only in the smallest way of encouragement. How special is what you do. I’m more than sorry for your loss. Rock on, my friend… rock on!!! ♥️
Keep doing rocks for Herbie. It makes his spirit live again in your heart and the rock shares it with the world. Take good care. 🌈😀
Helpful video! I use small medicine dose cups to pour my small-batch of resin into. They have various measurements on them to keep me accurate. I also use a silicone stirring stick which I just wipe off on my glove before my 1st stone. Any left over resin just peels off. For dust free(cat hair free in my house) drying, try a cake/baking pan with a lid. This keeps the dust out and you can move the rocks around easily. I use a sheet pan with a lid for tile magnets I paint.
Great tips!!! Thank you ♥️ love it!!!
Very helpful. I struggle with resin every time I use it. Thank you for sharing.
You are so welcome! I really hope this helps. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
That Vaseline trick is ingenious! Am going to try it!! Your artwork is beautiful! ❤
It's so good! That came to me from Linda C. I’m so thankful ♥️
Good morning Obie Wan 😅 GREAT VIDEO!
I have learned from a handful of UA-cam artists that using a wooden stir stick causes bubbles in the resin. They say always use a plastic stir stick. Well, if I ever get a place in my cluttered home to resin my rocks, I’ll try both and let you know.
Thank you ♥️ I’ve tried them both and even a silicone one.. bubbles come from stirring but it’s perfectly fine because they pop so easy. I picked wood to cut plastic usage but… I’ve used the same stick for like 2 years now so I think a plastic one would be reusable too. If you find it works better let me know ♥️ you rock Kat!!
I have used many brands of resin, and they all have their uses, but I can confirm that "Art Resin" is the best for using on rocks. Now, I live up North in Canada and we get hot sun in the summer but I don't think the rays are as strong as in Arkanses, so I would say that location can also playing into using it for outside as well,
My rocks have held up pretty good in the flower beds, but I have also packed them up for winter sometimes when I have had the time, and they are still pretty glossy... I definitely would not recommend using Mod Podge alone for outside rocks , that will not hold up to the elements at all... I think this video is the best for explain and lots of great tips, I am going to try the toothpick method as I usually use a silicone mat to set my rocks on but it gets all grit and needs a good cleaning after awhile... (not fun), but this Vaseline trick is ingenious, can't wait to try it out, total game changer ...thank you JaDel, this video is very informative, and I think beginners will appreciate it immensely...
Thanks for the tips Sandra. It’s nice to hear how it works in different parts of the world for sure. I hope this works out for you. I haven’t fixed a rock yet thanks to that petroleum jelly idea from Linda C. Brilliant ♥️
Great video as always! ❤
My one tip that I use is mixing my resin over a hot water bath. (Just a plastic container with hot water) the heat scares away any bubbles. Less to deal with once applied. :) I still use a torch for the small ones we can’t see.
Great tip! Thank you ♥️ I must admit off camera I hold the paper cup to my leg and in my left hand just for heat 🤣😂 it seems to help. Y’all are so smart with the water.
Excellent video and FANTASTIC tips!! The petroleum jelly tip…..WOW!! A tip I picked up from a video is to use a clear glass or plastic measuring cup to pour your resin in when using larger amounts. So if u need 1/2 cup resin, you would pour 1/4 cup of resin into the measuring cup, then add the hardener to the 1/2 cup mark and stir. This eliminates leaving behind any resin or hardener when scraping out two separate containers. Also rubbing alcohol cleans up the measuring cup and any tools you use so no sticky residue left behind. Another tip for eliminating a lot of bubbles is to use a “hot water bath” when mixing for the 3 minutes. The cup I mix resin in is smaller than a plastic solo cup, so I add hot tap water to a solo cup hold my cup with resin in it just far enough into the solo cup to have the resin in the water. I don’t want to take any chances of splashing water into my resin, so I only use the minimum hot water needed. To be clear, I have only done this with Resin Rockers 1:1 resin and it will speed up the curing time some which means it may shorten the time you have to spread your resin on your pieces, but I have never had it shorten my time enough to hinder my process. I resin wood cut outs and charger plates and have taken up to 45 minutes of spreading the resin without any issues.
All true!! I’ve tried those things too. You’d have laughed at me warming the resin. It began to harden and I was like uhhhhh what the?? I hold my paper cup in my hand and my hand seems to warm it enough… but it’s all a lot of work to reduce bubbles you’re just gonna torch anyhow. I love these tips. See? We are going to have it all right here in this video and comments. Thank you ♥️
Another option is place the resin into a vacuum chamber and using a machine that you can vacuum food for those plastic bags for the freezer, it will vacuum out the bubbles, just don’t use the one for your food. As they are half the price than the ones being sold for doing resin only. I had two machines one I bought for Mom as well as my own one. When I moved back home to help Dad to look after Mom before her passing we ended up with two of most house hold items. So when I watched all the unboxing of the resin vacuum chambers I remember I now have two machines. I also have a vacuum chamber which was for using with dry goods but it got to be a hassle having to vacuum it every time I opened it to grab a handful of the contents. I now use it to vacuum the resin to remove the bubbles.
@dawsie wow… I bet that would work. And it could double as a dust free drying space? Interesting idea 💡
Thank you so much My darling for that excellent tips. You are awesome ❤❤❤
Awwwww, thank you Elizabeth ♥️♥️♥️
I think you just took my hesitation away to try resin! 😆 Wonderful tips and tricks. Thank you for sharing them with us! 💚
You are so welcome! I hope it helps. I was terrified myself because there’s some real stories out there. I never found one about this brand so I went for it. I’m just super careful and so far so good.
Wonderful video, full of important information on using resin. It's the most informative video I've seen! Thanks to you, everyone who views this video should be very successful, when using resin on their rocks! ❤
Oh that’s wonderful news. I was really hoping for that. Thank you ♥️
Fantastic video! Thank you for doing this for us ❤
My pleasure… I just had to put it all together. Hope you’re having a good Sunday ♥️😀
WOW! What TOP NOTCH TUTORIAL!! And thank you SO MUCH for all the important helpful tips!! This video came right on time for me and much appreciated.
You are so welcome! This is awesome Thank you ♥️
Ive been looking for about a yr on hos to do this and just finally found your video! Life saver!!!
Great to hear! I’m so glad I could help you. Let me know if you need anything else. I’m never too far from these comments ♥️
Thank you for posting this! The information is so helpful. I have always struggled with the damage left behind on the backs of the rocks. I saw where someone used the "Scat Cat" garden mats that have little plastic security spikes (they do not actually hurt the animal) and these have worked better than anything I have tried before. But I do love the vaseline trick! Thanks for sharing!
I wondered if the Vaseline will work on those mats too. I’m almost positive it will but I haven’t tried so I didn’t mention. If you try it will you let us know?
I love scat mats. They are great to used with spray paint for a primer layer. It keeps an air layer underneath so some of the over-spray and get under the edges.
They look pretty cool.
Another person I follows make sure that they cover their freshly resined pieces so that no lint gets on them while drying. Also they actually let the resin warm up in hot water for 10 minutes and then after mixing they let it sit for 10 minutes to get rid of the bubbles in the mixture. Whatever works, I guess. Your rocks are gorgeous!!
Awesome tips!!! I need to cover mine for sure. It’s comical here now after the vacuum incident. I’m like… nobody goes in or out in the first 24 hours. It sits atop some drawers and one time I bent over to get access to bottom drawer and my ponytail landed right in a freshly resined rock. My hair got 6 inches shorter that day… facepalm
@@JaDeLRocks oh no!!! 😬 Oops.
@@JaDeLRocks this was the full instructions the other artist gave me. Her resin looked like glass!
Warm the two bottles in Hot tap water for 10 minutes, measure properly, stir for 3 full minutes, let sit for 10 minutes. Dust off all the pieces with an eye glass cloth then pour on and smooth with a gloved finger, then torch. Then use a toothpick if there are any pieces of lint. Then we cover with a clean lint free cover. Check in 10 minutes to make sure there are no bubbles or any lint that has found it’s way to the piece, if so pick it out with the toothpick, torch again if needed and cover.
Sounds like solid advice. I might be too lazy or rushed to add all those steps for the same results. Im usually going in a thousand directions. However, I should incorporate some sort of dust free cover like that. Thank you ♥️ this might give others ideas 💡 you rock 💪🏻
Great video thanks for all the amazing tips
My pleasure! Thank you ♥️
Thank you so much for all the fantastic tips. I will definitely keep them in mind when coating my art work x❤
Awesome!! Thank you Lesley ♥️
Gooood morning! I have minimal experience with resin because my projects typically don't need it. I AM, however, staring at a molded stone I'm putting off doing. :-) I have only ever used Art Resin and typically poured it when I did use it. Your tips will come in very handy when I DO get to that stone. I will say, when I used it before, I cleaned up my spoons, cups, and me with hand sanitizer. They cleaned up easily to be used another day. Our FL humidity does pose a challenge in paint AND resin drying. But that heat sure can bend a record album into a pretty banana bowl. 😂 Have a great day!
I can’t wait to see how you do with the stone. The hand sanitizer does work well because of the alcohol content. Clorox wipes or Lysol wipes work great too. I began using Napkins or paper towels when there was a shortage of disinfectants.. it worked well enough that I kept it in use because it’s cheaper and less plastic. I use those wet wipes I showed on my skin if I whoops. You know your stuff lady! Thank you ♥️ this is definitely a tip that works and is useful 😀
@JaDeLRocks ❤️ you'll see my stone soon...just trying to decide which one of your videos to follow :-D I'm thinking one of the green ones since St Paddy's Day is coming soon. It'll take me that long to start it. lol
@paulinechoate5974 😂😂😂 go get em gal 🍀
@@JaDeLRocks 😅
Great tips. Thanks
Thank you ♥️ I appreciate it Connie 😀
Good morningJaDel. Really great advice! You always deliver!
Thank you ♥️ Happy Sunday 😀
Great demo. Love the toothpick/petroleum/styrofoam hack. Can hardly wait to try it.
It’s been such a game changer for me. Thank you ♥️
Thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. To being with, I think your artwork is absolutely stunning!!! But I really want to thank you for your extraordinary tips and tricks. I have been struggling to resin my stones and have been so disappointed with the results to the point of wrecking all my hard work. I can hardly wait to try resining my stones using your methods. I'm very certain I will have much better results!!! I hope you know how profound your sharing has been for me. Hugs
Wow Linda.. that sure means an awful lot to me. Thank you ♥️ if you run into any snags or need anything just let me know. I really appreciate this comment and you taking the time to lead it. Kindness 😊😊😊♥️
awesome video Jadel, your very talented at editing and producing quality tutorials as well as a fantastic artist.... is there any thing you cant do???? lol just kidding . I am just jelly hahaha
I dont use resin, yes because im chicken. But I find I love using ultra gloss liquitex varnish on mine. I have never had an issue with leaving my rocks outside. But of course on the west coast of Canada, we do not have extreme heat and extreme cold most of the time it just rains lol
Great video as always ❤
LOL, I love ya Fran!!! I will get some if I don’t already have it and see how it holds up down here. LOL, that’ll fun!!
Vos conseils sont précieux. Merci
Awesome 😎 Have a wonderful week ♥️
You are very generous with ideas and tips. And compassionate. Nice comment to that lady who lost her son. You are a good and talented person. 👏👏😀🌈👏👏👏
Awwww, Lorraine you are so very kind week after week. Right back at ya ♥️♥️♥️♥️ Thank you ♥️
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and thank to everyone who also contributed with their experiences 😍
How sweet of you 😊 thank you for watching and your kindness ♥️
I was so glad to find this video. I am just now starting to resin my rocks and the first batch stuck to the surface (aluminum foil) and yes it came off but not without a struggle. thank goodness it didn't ruin the finish. but it was not easy. so thank you for these amazing tips.
Wonderful! If you ever have any question just ask… I’m never too far away from these comments ♥️♥️♥️
Great tip about the styrofoam, tooth picks and petroleum jelly
Thank you ♥️ it was a group effort for sure 👍🏻
This is the most excellent resin tutorial! So comprehensive! Brilliant!!!♥️🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
Wow, thank you! 😊 I really tried!!
This was so helpful. I do resin art and now have started painting rocks! I resined my rocks and had issues with the bases. I ended up putting a felt backing to hide any marks. I will try the petroleum jelly on toothpicks as this looked great! Thank you
Terrific!!! I’m so tickled this will help you. 🤗🤗🤗
Thank you soooo much! I’ve been using way too much resin on my rocks and then I have to use a Dremel to grind the excess off the back. ❤
Oh my… you are so welcome. This will save you tons of work and make the art a whole lot more fun ♥️♥️♥️ Good luck.. 🤞🏻
Thanks Jadel, I do have this kind of resin, but usually I use the UV kind. Usually takes about 20 minutes in the sun..Also the first time I ever used the 2 part was on my expresso flower and it did get blotchy. Not sure why, I probably mixed it wrong. 😅
It never even crossed my mind that uv would cure in sun. LOL. I’ve never used it but I’m about to. What brand do you use?
That espresso flower got us both eh? Lol
Hi! I have used many resins over the years, but I use Resin Rockers UV for my painted rocks. They also have a FB group that can be very helpful!
Thank you ♥️ I’m writing that one down. I may try uv this year and I have a short list going on.
Great tips! Subscribed. I paint intricate Celtic interlace on beach stones and have used a tripod method with needles resined into bottle caps, then poked through layered cardboard. While not as beautiful a coat as resin, I have had great luck with Liquitex brush on lacquer to hold up against outdoor conditions. The brand of resin I use I haven't tested for outdoors.
Great tips!! Thank you ♥️ I’ve used that Liquitex varnish too but haven’t tested it myself. Miranda Pitrone suggests that for outdoor rocks.
Great information. Thank you for sharing. I have one tip for you. To reduce the amount of bubbles use a plastic stir stick and stir slow.
Great tip! Thank you ♥️ what exactly makes plastic better than wood? I have some old acrylic dotting rods I can use but I’m not clear the difference.
@@JaDeLRocks the wood is porous and causes the air to get in the resin.
@janinelennon2337 ok… I’ve been using the same stick forever so that probably only applies to the first time I used it right?
Thanks. I had blotchy rocks too!
I was so thrilled to find multiple reasons. Everyone always said it must be the mix when I knew it wasn’t. It took me forever to figure out what was going on 😂
Re: splotches in resin finish.
Another reason is if you are using any kind of spray paint, like a finish. The gasses can release, causing splotches if not fully cured and dry. I'm not sure if other paints can cause this.
Awesome to know… Thank you ♥️
Amazing work and so thankful for you sharing your trial and error to help others! Have you found a good sealer for outdoor use?
I’ve only heard that liquitex gloss and matte varnish work well. I don’t put very many outside for long. I still use resin. I just put them in indirect sun and hope they’re found.
So many tips. What do you recommend for outdoor rocks?
I don’t have a trick other than doing upkeep. Maybe reapplying. I believe Miranda Pitrone has a video on Liquitex Varnish that she uses. If it’s the video I watched years ago I think she uses it outdoors for 10+ years…. ua-cam.com/video/XF2cb8MTKk0/v-deo.htmlsi=EZP98eJTQU3mA505
@JaDeLRocks I wonder if you could use that over the resin? The epoxy resin they use on boats has to be protected by a uv protection varnish also. Would be worth a try on a test piece.
@Jendolll2012 I’ve only heard that it does yellow and crack but really I think everyone has a negative effect with everything. I think my negative reaction to outdoors with art resin may be just significant to my location. Someone up north may put this stuff out for years and it be fine. I honestly can’t think of a thing that will battle this southern heat and humidity without upkeep. I have a stone on my daddy’s grave that I resin yearly and it’s still perfect. So who’s to say many coats isn’t the trick. There are just many variables to this whole art to explore. I think that’s why I love it. If you try the boat resin I’d love to hear how it goes. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
Thank you❤
You're welcome 😊 But I feel like I should really Thank you ♥️
What do you recommend for protection of outdoor rocks?
Liquitex varnish. I watched a video from Miranda Pitrone and that’s what she uses. I still use the resin for my kindness rocks because I figure they will be found and taken in doors. I also have a rock on my dad’s grave that’s shaded and it seems fine. It’s got a couple of coats though.
Totally new to using resin ontop of my rocks I use Acrylic based Paints on my rock and was using Areosal ModPodge over my rocks. But would The resin work well with Acrylic based paints?
@@sarahglenn5046 all of my paints are acrylic. So far the only struggle I’ve had with paint and Art Resin is if I use a chalky finish paint. It’s as if the resin doesn’t want to cover it well. Also, be very sure your paint is dry. If you are using low quality paints like Apple Barrel you will want a quick coat of mod podge first to prevent some vibrant colors like red from running. I don’t have this problem with other brands. Let me know if you need anything further. I don’t mind helping 🤗
Which Sealer would you reccomend for outside direct sunlight?
I haven’t found anything to handle the heat and humidity here where I live. Other climates use liquitex varnish.
So have you used art resin on other surfaces? Like wood, canvas, or acrylic, discs, or plastic Christmas globes? If so, I’d appreciate any tips you have for spreading the resin on the surfaces, especially the flat ones because I know some people use foam brushes, or do it different ways. I have used Krylon triple thick spray on rocks for outdoors and they hold up well in upstate ny year round. Just don’t have a safe way to spray during winter month’s.
I used this same technique on my Christmas ornaments. I just used a small dowel in the styrofoam and put the opening of the ornament on it. I did wooden key chains which I hung to dry. I did a small wooden sign that was flat the exact same as the rocks. It was fine but not as pretty as the ones I see on art resin’s website. The have a UA-cam channel too. You can look up how to resin almost anything there and they give great advice and easy videos. They just didn’t have a rock one… at least not art stones like mine. So I made one. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
@@JaDeLRocks and I am so glad you did! It's really helpful and I appreciate very much!
Awesome Thank you ♥️
You can paint on top of resin? With acrylic paints?
Yes.. I’ve done it but it will scratch off so you’ll need to resin on top too.
If you use an outdoor paint.
I think these paints are indoor/outdoor. I’ll double check.
I would love to use the Vaseline trick, but I have an allergy to it and just don’t want to risk it around me. As resin self levels I can use a paintbrush and paint it on, now being resin it would ruin any normal paintbrush so I bought a silicon pastry brush and once the resin dries it just peels off the brush and your left with a piece of holy resin and a very clean brush. Once the backs are cured then just turn over the rocks and paint the fronts. Never do it the other way as you really need at least 7 days for resin to be totally cured so you will run the risk of leaving dimples in the resin.
I’m so sorry.. allergies can stink for sure. I’m so happy you found something that works for you. It goes to show where there’s a will there’s a way. 💪🏻
I used toothpicks without petroleum jelly and they stuck. How do I fix it
Watch my old video but go on and fast forward towards the end. I didn’t use the Vaseline then either. I show how I’ve fixed them for years. Now I don’t have to but this should help. Good luck.. 🤞🏻
Resin Wow! | How to protect your rocks with Art Resin | How to make rocks shine | Epoxy Resin
ua-cam.com/video/iA3t5MKVa2A/v-deo.html
Recently had a customer complain about some of the rocks i used resin on. Shes bringing them back. If it looks like the resin might be at fault i will look for one thats better outside. If you hear of one, i hope to spot your tip another time.
Yah, I never recommend any resin outdoors. I’ll cross my fingers for ya.
I'm super bummed.
I ordered my art resin a few days ago before watching this video.
I had fully intended on using it for outdoor rocks.
Do you have a recommendation for what to use for outdoor rocks?
I live in Indiana. High heat, High humidity 😩
@JaDelRocks
I’m so sorry. A lot of folks use Liquitex Varnish. That’s all I used when I began but I never tested it outdoors. Miranda Pitrone uses it on her outdoor rocks and loves it. Let me see if I can find her video for ya… brb
Here’s one.. it looks like she has at least one more video on this too. ua-cam.com/video/XF2cb8MTKk0/v-deo.htmlsi=hPlclNkQlPUGTVyE
@@JaDeLRocks thank you! 😊
@@DisneyUpBoilerUp anytime ♥️♥️♥️
Just s heads up but the pink filters on your face mask do NOT protect from fumes (the dangerous part of reain). You need VOC filters. The pink ones are for particulates like glitter or mica.
Nice to know. I wonder why it says for epoxy resin. Sigh.. you just can’t trust anything can you. Thanks for telling me.