#cast on tutorial
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Ocker’s Circular Cast-On.








Make a loop near the yarn end. (I have the tail under the loop here, but I don’t think this is vital.)
Using a crochet hook, *chain one into the loop with the working yarn. (The first chain looks the worst, having no firm structure yet, but only temporarily.)
Chain one into the new chain stitch. Leave the stitch on the crochet hook and continue.*
Repeat * to * until you have the number of stitches you need.
Transfer stitches to DPNs (or another knitting needle as called fro by whatever you’re working on; sometimes I use this cast-on as a really short/gathered cast-on for flat knitting, and in those cases, the pattern instructions will call for you to work flat). Incidentally, this step can be made much easier if you’ve got crochet hooks that are built like a straight smooth stick, with no ergonomics or ornamentation—you can just slide the stitches off the non-hooked end to transfer to the relevant needle.
Once that’s done, pull the tail drawstring-style (be kind of gentle with a delicate yarn) to draw the center together, and you’ve got a nice beginning for work from the center out!
(I’m going to pull mine apart. You may be able to see why. It’s completely unfinished yarn, but it’s been on the bobbin so long the twist is pretty inert.)
#this was not supposed to be a tutorial! I had a green circular cast-on I took a few pictures of#but I only took pictures of three of the steps and you couldn’t see how the loop was made#Yarn#knit#knitting#ocker’s circular cast-on#handspun yarn#handspun#terrible tutorial#cast on tutorial#Photo tutorial
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ok
#hellsing#fanart#alucard#alucard hellsing#big farts#anime#art#hellsing fanart#girlycard#vladcard#is it childcard#or babycard#the gangs all here#hellsing ultimate#vampire#oh fuck ya#i get kouta hirano#i almost quit#cause i missed drawing seras#mandatory bbl for the hellsing cast#abused tf out of kyler's alucard hair tutorial#sorry kyler#generational trauma
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So, this one's for the dreamers.
Caden Brauch as Marty McFly and Don Stephenson as Doc Brown - Back To The Future: First US National Tour
#back to the future#bttf#back to the future the musical#back to the future musical#bttf musical#marty mcfly#doc brown#caden brauch#don stephenson#musicalgifs#broadwayedit#slime tutorial#i filmed this#flashing gif#happy trails to the broadway cast of back to the future!!
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The grease sure does seem to have a hold on people lately...
The Outsiders October 2024 Broadway - $9.25
Cast: Trevor Wayne (u/s Ponyboy Curtis), Sky Lakota-Lynch (Johnny Cade), Joshua Boone (Dallas Winston), Victor Carrillo Tracey (u/s Darrel Curtis), Dan Berry (u/s Sodapop Curtis), Maggie Kuntz (u/s Cherry Valance), Daryl Tofa (Two-Bit Mathews), Kevin William Paul (Bob Sheldon/Cop), Ryo Kamibayashi (u/s Paul Holden), SarahGrace Mariani (Marcia), Tilly Evans-Krueger (Ace), Andre Malcolm (t/r Steve), RJ Higton (Chet), Henry Julian Gendron (s/w Trip), Jordan Chin (s/w Ensemble), Milena J Comeau (s/w Ensemble)
Notes: MP4 format. Filmed from the left-mid mezzanine. Mix of wide shots and zooms. First full understudy Curtis family performance! Decent amount of washout at times, but relatively minimal obstruction. Includes bows. NFT and NFS forever due to leaks.
Screenshots: https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBR3mk
#i filmed this#musicals#musical bootlegs#musical gifs#broadway#theatreedit#slime tutorial#outsiders#the oustiders#outsiders musical#the outsiders broadway#book to stage#s e hinton#ponyboy curtis#the outsiders ponyboy#ponyboy michael curtis#stay gold ponyboy#sodapop curtis#cherry valance#johnny cade#two bit mathews#darrel curtis#stay gold#the outsiders cast#darry curtis#sky lakota lynch#the outsiders#ponyboy#rumble#understudy
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ghost trick was amazing but how the fuck do you make a game where unburying people is one of its core mechanics and then don't unbury the dead wives. are you kidding me with this crap.
#ghost trick#''they're back for the epilogue tho'' i meant unbury them ingame and have them as relevant characters we never even *see* yomel's fiancee#and alma??? ALMA?????#from the middle story segment you set up TWO deceased figures whose death was devastatingly influential to the main cast characters#the man from the park and jowd's wife. and coincidentally... wouldn't you look at that. two plot central spirit presences#whose identity is deliberately obscured from us. oh boy i wonder who the mysterious tutorial ghost who wants us to watch over jowd's family#could possibly be i have to wonde—WHAT DO YOU MEAN IT'S THE FUCKING DOG AGAIN
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attempting to learn animation
#my art#dracula#dracula daily#i saw a seaweed animstion tutorial and next thing i knew the old man was staring at me#i shld prolly do the bouncing ball and the flour sack fundamentals but man. i am so lazy#i actually did this and a bunch of other headshots in a week in like 31 dec-7 Jan but havent posted lol. will slowly post them#and compile them in a post once i work through the whole main cast... classes are starting and i Need to do my thesis (clearly not doing it)
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anyone know witchcraft i need a bitch handled
#sick of ts#if y'all got any tutorials send them my way#looking for baddies who are down to cast a spell#sick of these hoes
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A little preview of something I’ve been working on ❤️♌️
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Guess I’ve been feeling nostalgic as I’m redrawing my Legacy of Winx OC’s AND reanimating my Sailor Senshi OC, Leo! I suppose I really meant it when I said I was going to learn OpenToonz since my CSP license is about to expire, I might even fully switch over!
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Would y’all like to see a process/comparison video? The initial plan was to post a comparison gif like I did in 2019, but I love sharing my processes when it comes to art 🤔🤔🤔
⬇️Comparison gif under the cut anyway ⬇️
#after I finished that Flybeau animation I started watching more OpenToonz tutorials#and came across NobleFrugal’s Texture-in-Color which was the impetus for this project#because my biggest gripe with doing it before was how much labor it was overlaying the moving body texture with the BG#but with the FX nodes in OT and can just key it in and drop in the background!#Also also that retro looks I’ve been struggling to get in Davinci I can fully do in OpenToonz!#I just have to get OUT of the habit of turning off my tablet when I’m done drawing because my phone and tablet screens are more alike#my monitor has blue cast and a slightly lower resolution so the retro effect is dulled when I transfer it over to my phone#my art#digital art#fan art#fan animation#opentoonz#opentoonz animation#digital animation#hobbyist animator#amateur animator#sailor moon#sailor moon oc#sailor senshi#sailor soldier#zodiac soldier: Leo#retro anime#retro anime aesthetic#do NOT ask why I put Leo in the 4th house I don’t remember but it was in the storyboard#music and sound fx sourced from Sailor Moon Classic!#except for 2 specific sounds which come from Tropical Rouge: PreCure ❤️#I’d like to finish this before my birthday#but with less than three weeks before my internship I’d really like to use the rest of June for cosplay and sewing projects#I also have an embroidery commission that I should finish the bulk of before I leave#so this will just have to wait for now
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does anyone know where I can get a bootleg performance of samantha barks in Oliver as Nancy?


#oliver#oliver musical#west end#touring cast#samantha barks#samantha barks post#i love samantha barks#musical theatre#theature kid#oliver on tour#as long as he needs me#i'd do anything#bootleg#slime tutorials
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Spaceknights:
Skera the Scanner and Vola the Trapper

Scanner and Trapper got the closest to my Tokusatsu-Spaceknight dreams in relation to my Live-Action ROM Spaceknight video project.
All the SpaceKnights are at least a bit toyetic, and you can see Marvel trying to throw Parker Bros a bone that they never snatched with everyone from Firefall onward. Scanner and Trapper are two of my favorites.
Full tutorializing under the fold.
Overpainting was the most effective way to get the designs to where I wanted them, and this is going to be the main breakdown of that (later posts about other knights will likely focus on other aspects).
I used Midjourney's edit feature to do this. The first step is getting the image high-enough res to work with. MJ's edit feature can be used as a very effective image upscaler, and that's the first step.

It's also useful for removing word balloons and other obstructions that the AI will later misinterpret and getting a view of an entire character if parts are cropped off. You will need to often extract backgrounds manually, especially with comic art where AI background removal tools usually fail.
Once the image is upscaled you're going to get better results using the overpainting/retexture feature. Which you're going to have to use a lot because anytime you're using overpainting to shift a character in art style, its going to involve compositing.
No single version of Vola or Sekra had all the right parts, so photoshopped the bits I liked together before re-loading it into MJ's editor for some touchups. Sometimes you have to make a mockup and use that as a character reference or fully retexture over it.
You'll notice that I removed Vola's net. Accessories, if on the character model, will always be on the character when used with Vidu's system, and often glitch because of it. You can always put them back in with a second image reference or with a specific reference that still has them.
Once you have the reference image, you can use the character. Though if you want to use them a lot, you'll want a full model sheet with multiple views.
More to come.
#AI tutorial#midjourney tutorial#the process#unreality#rom#rom spaceknight#spaceknights#dire wraiths#marvel#fauxstalgia#nostalgia#ai art#ai assisted art#ai video#vidu#vidu ai#fanart#fan casting
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Me when "Little Brother" from The Outsiders musical
#btw I don't care what some say ensembles MAKE musicals along with soloists#this song just doesn't quite hit the same without the cast backing for dally#sound wise#ensembles are not boring#favorite song in the show#please theater gods bless us with a slime tutorial of this whole show#the outsiders#the outsiders musical
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SiliNOT! Testing and Review
Since I run a lot of casting workshops, I've had several people in the costuming/maker community ask me my opinion on SiliNOT!, a relatively new product advertised as a budget- and eco-friendly moldmaking alternative to silicone, urethane, and other single-use materials.
I finally bought a couple of bottles to play with, so I did a test project. My experience and findings are below! (It's not a recipe blog, but if you want to skip the play-by-play and get to the TL;DR, it's under the big "In Summary" header near the bottom.)

First, if you aren't familiar with this material, SiliNOT! is a remeltable, reusable medium for making molds. Though its exact ingredients are not disclosed, it purports to nontoxic, food-safe, and compostable. It melts in a household microwave or double boiler and solidifies at room temperature (or in a refrigerator/freezer for faster results). The website is https://silinot.com/.
(I am not an affiliate, and have no connection to this company apart from having made one retail purchase from them. I just have a lot of casting experience and like trying out new products.)
The Positive Original
I’m still in the middle of a Vincent Valentine build, so I decided to test the SiliNOT! on his custom buttons. My original is a stack of various nonporous materials: an antique (probably Bakelite) coat button, an epoxy resin dome I cast using a mold I already had in my library, and some engraved Worbla’s Pearly Art for the raised detail. The button shanks won’t be added until the final casting, so the original can be mounted flat for the moldmaking process.
Sample Worbla on the left; completed button stack on the right:

The Mold
I built the mold container the same way I do for silicone pours, with the flat back of the button fixed to a styrene plate and a cylinder (actually a small paper cup with the bottom cut off) surrounding it for the walls. The lip of the cup is sealed all the way around with Monster Clay to prevent leaks.

Heating and Pouring
The SiliNOT! didn’t take long at all to heat up; I did maybe four or five 20-second bursts before it was completely fluid. The bottle does get rather warm, so hand protection isn’t a bad idea. If you have heat-resistant gloves, you can use those; I was working in my kitchen (yay for nontoxic stuff!), so I just grabbed an oven mitt with a silicone grip.

The melted SiliNOT! looks a bit like Luke Skywalker’s blue milk. It’s about the consistency of a yogurt smoothie and likes to pour in a thicker stream compared to silicone. While silicone can be stretched into a thin ribbon for delicate pours or chemically thinned with solvent for really tricky jobs, SiliNOT!'s viscosity is dependent on temperature and never seems to get quite as thin as silicone.
I’d automatically made my mold compact to conserve material (not really a concern with a reusable moldmaking material like SiliNOT!, but after using silicone for more than a decade, I’ve trained myself to be as efficient as possible), so the walls of my mold container were only about half or three quarters of an inch from my object. Because the target was so narrow, I found it difficult to accurately fill from the lowest area of the mold with the SiliNOT! The heavier pour also means more air can get trapped in or under the material.

Bubbles are one of the areas in which SiliNOT! is decidedly inferior to silicone. SiliNOT! has higher viscosity, so bubbles don’t want to rise to the surface without vigorous tapping, which can distort the mold edges or affect leveling depending on your mold container. The bubbles that do make their way to the surface are difficult to pop, even when poked with a sharp implement. Heat gun degassing doesn’t have much effect.
Since the bubble surface cools and skins over quickly, I actually had to use a tool and scoop some large bubbles completely out of the mold to allow the surface to level. Critically, the SiliNOT! is opaque, so you can’t spot bubbles clinging to the surface of your original. (This is why my first mold was a reject, and I had to repour. More on that below.)
Hardening
Once the surface had set, I carefully moved the mold into the refrigerator to cool faster. Here’s another area where some types of silicone can have an advantage: I typically use fast-curing Smooth-On products (because I always have random quantities left to use up after our casting workshops), so I rarely have to wait more than half an hour for a silicone mold to cure, regardless of its size or mass.
The SiliNOT! has to chill completely before handling, though, and discharging that amount of heat requires a fair amount of time even in a cool environment. My mold was pretty small, maybe 2 1/2” wide by 1” deep, and it still took around 40 minutes to cool completely. A larger, deeper mold could hold considerably more energy in the center, and might have to be left in the freezer for a couple of hours before use.
Demolding the Original
When the mold was completely chilled, I removed it from the refrigerator and popped it off the plastic plate I’d used for the base of the mold. The texture was very different from what I’d expected: Unlike other meltable materials (Monster Clay, et al.) that have a firm surface when cool, the SiliNOT! remains tacky, which means it promptly collects any debris that crosses its path. In my case, this meant I had to pick dog hair off the surface throughout the casting process (and I don’t want to think about what would happen if glitter had contaminated the work space).

I’d used a paper cup for my mold walls, which usually works fine with fast-curing silicone. But the SiliNOT! must have a high oil content, because the cup absorbed some of it:

Lesson learned; use only nonporous containers with this stuff.
The SiliNOT!! really wanted to cling to the edges of my original, so I had to go slow at first to avoid tearing the thin flanges of the mold off. However, it did demold nicely from the smooth surfaces, and preserved texture very well. You can see the Worbla pebbling and the engraving channels clearly in the mold (as well as some dust and dog hair, because I made the mistake of setting it down briefly):


Unfortunately, as you can see, a large bubble had stuck to my original and created a pit in the mold, so I decided to do a second mold pour. I figured I’d tear up the failed mold and put the pieces back in the bottle to remelt… and discovered I couldn’t. The mold would stretch and twist, but not tear. It also seemed to return to its original shape relatively faithfully. Here’s a video of me manhandling the mold:
As you can see, the SiliNOT! has much better stretch and recovery than many silicone products (there are silicones that stretch well -- some of the Dragon Skin products come to mind -- but they’re not typically marketed for moldmaking). This means it’s likely well suited to casting objects with moderate undercuts or oddly-shaped bits that need the mold to stretch during demolding.
You can cut the SiliNOT! easily with scissors, which is the recommended method for getting it back in the bottle when you’re ready to remelt.
Take Two
Using what I’d learned from the first pour, I did the second one inside a hard plastic ramekin. This gave me a bit more room to pour into the floor of the mold, reducing the bubble risk, and also eliminated the porous paper cup that had absorbed oil. I still had the issue with bubbles that didn’t want to pop, but there were fewer of them this time.

The ramekin made for a much cleaner mold, buuuuut there was ANOTHER BUBBLE right in the middle of the design. >.<

Take Three
Lather, rinse, repeat. Or in this case, melt, pour, chill.
This time I heated the SiliNOT! as much as I dared and did the absolute slowest, narrowest pour I could manage, giving the air extra time to escape as the mold was filled from the bottom. The risk with stringing out the pour like this is that in a thinner stream, the heat escapes faster, leading to uneven viscosity as the liquid fills the mold. I don’t think that’s a major problem for this particular piece, but it’s something to pay attention to as regards leveling and degassing, especially for larger molds that will take longer to fill.
The result of pour three:

/siiiiigh/ Well, at least the bubbles are smaller, this time. They may not show up enough to matter in the final cast. I’ll give it a try.
Casting
I had leftover workshop resin that was getting on toward the end of its shelf life, so I used Smooth-On Smooth-Cast 300 for my initial resin trial. It’s an opaque white resin with about a 10-minute cure time (the fast turnaround is why we use it for workshops).
Before pouring, I had to do a little mold cleanup where the SiliNOT! had managed to sneak under the edge of the Worbla (I think I’d loosened the corner of the star from prying it out of so many molds), but since the SiliNOT! stretches so well, it was pretty easy to invert it to get little scissors down into the bottom of the depression.
For the first cast, I didn’t use anything but the resin in order to get a baseline. Ideally I’d like to cold cast or dye the resin so I don’t have to worry about paint chipping, but since I’m doing a trial here (and need multiple buttons anyway) I figured some plain white extras wouldn’t hurt.
So, my first cast…


…smacked into a big problem, which I probably should have seen coming: The resin I’m using is a fast cure formula, which means it discharges a fair amount of heat as it's going through that rapid chemical reaction -- enough heat to melt the SiliNOT!, as it turned out. When I tried to demold it (after giving it a few extra minutes beyond label time to be sure it was done), the surface of the mold had melted to the resin and even embedded itself in a few places. It’s difficult to see the resin detail in the photos (my camera went into white balance panic mode with all the shades of white and blue), but you can see how pitted the formerly-smooth mold surface is.
In fairness to the SiliNOT!, the bottle does say that you should put the mold in the freezer for half an hour before casting high-temperature materials. But I assumed high-temperature material was something like candle wax or melted chocolate, rather than ordinary resin. (And the mold had just come out of the refrigerator.)
So, on to pour FOUR of the SiliNOT! mold…
Take Four
NGL, this is getting a little old. >.<
Fourth mold definitely needed some cleanup around the edges, and there are still a couple of tiny bubbles I can’t seem to get rid of, but it’s good enough for a test. (I’m starting to despair of using these for actual production, given how many times I’ve had to redo the molds because of bubbles...)

Deep in the recesses of my basement, I found some transparent epoxy resin with a 24-hour cure time -- much slower and lower-temperature than the Smooth-Cast. Since it cures clear, I went ahead and mixed in some metallic powder pigment on the off chance that I get a usable button out of this one. I had excess resin after mixing, so I poured that into my first mold, which has a bubble in the design but is otherwise fine. Two test pieces are better than one, right?
Results
Here are the results of the slow-curing resin out of mold #4:


Finally, a (mostly) clean cast!
As you can see, the detail reproduction is excellent -- certainly on par with the pulls from the silicone mold I ended up making while waiting on this set to cure (purely for time reasons; I couldn’t afford five days to cast the buttons using slow-curing resin, and with a silicone mold and fast-curing resin I could get them all done within a couple of hours).
However, you can also see a few spots where bits of the SiliNOT! embedded themselves in the final cast. Part of that may be due to design flaw in the original; I didn’t want to glue anything permanently to the antique button, and that resulted in a tiny gap between the button and the resin hemisphere. Silicone has enough strength to resist tearing out in that kind of area, but apparently the SiliNOT! doesn’t. The bits of mold around the outer edge seem to have stuck just to be difficult, as there was no structural reason for those to have become embedded in the resin. This means the mold could be damaged by successive casts, reducing its usable life and accuracy.
Still, the mold definitely produced decent results for a first cast, and a different shape might not have had as much of a problem with tearing off mold parts. The slow-curing resin is a bit of a limitation, but not a unique one (I use this same epoxy resin for any glass-clear casts I do, and only use the Smooth-Cast 300 for opaque items or things I need very quickly). I don’t personally use UV resin, but I’d be curious to learn how it performs with the SiliNOT!
IN SUMMARY:
Here’s the TL;DR on SiliNOT!
Pros
Cost effectiveness. This is the most obvious advantage of SiliNOT! over silicone; it’s (theoretically) infinitely reusable, and even with natural attrition/inevitable contamination from use, you can likely get over a hundred pours out of a bottle. That's a lot cheaper per use than silicone.
Non-toxicity. SiliNOT! is touted as food contact-safe, so you don’t have to panic if you get it on your skin or kitchen counters. While platinum-cure silicone is also relatively harmless (some varieties are labeled for food or life casting), other common moldmaking materials such as tin-cure silicone or urethane are not. (NOTE: Since the company is very hush-hush about what actually makes up the SiliNOT! secret formula, I do not know if it might release any vapors or fumes that would be irritating or harmful to pet birds. In general, I advise not doing any kind of casting around birds.)
Eco-friendliness. This is the biggest draw for me personally: Given the number of casting workshops I run and all the things I sell commercially, I have constant guilt about the amount of waste I generate for creative projects. In most areas of life I’m an aggressive reduce/reuse/recycler and try to use organic materials instead of synthetics whenever possible, so a mold that’s reusable and compostable is very appealing.
Ease of use. It’s honestly pretty hard to mess this up -- just microwave according to the directions and pour. No measuring, no A/B mixture, no concerns about chemical contamination from latex or sulfur, etc.
Shelf life. Unlike silicones, which have a shelf life of anywhere from six months to three years depending on storage conditions, the SiliNOT! purports to be shelf-stable. It's compostable, so don’t bury it in your yard, but otherwise it appears that it could be kept on hand for years.
Cons
Bubbles. Honestly the most irritating thing about this stuff for me. I’m used to being able to see bubbles forming as I pour, tap them to the surface, and remove them. The fact that I poured four molds of the same object and never once got one without bubbles is super irritating.
Stickiness. I’m not a big fan of the tacky surface texture, and while I haven’t done any cold casting yet, I can imagine that it would be very difficult to clean out any pigment or mica powder that got where you didn’t want it. I probably wouldn’t use this for any kind of cold casting that required isolated colored areas or changing colors between casts.
Set time. The SiliNOT! may take longer to cool than a fast silicone would to cure when dealing with larger molds, so it’s not ideal for projects with a really tight turnaround. (But cosplayers would never be casting something the night before a con, right? We always plan ahead and never, ever procrastinate!)
Library life. The SiliNOT! may or may not structurally degrade over time the way urethane, latex, and tin cure silicones do, but I noticed even in my very limited casts that it was prone to having tiny bits of the mold (particularly at edges) stick and pull off. While I keep most of my platinum silicone molds for years and reuse them, I don’t feel that the SiliNOT! molds would hold up to repeated casting, and they’re far more sensitive to ambient temperature, so they’re probably best used for short term only. (I also wonder about the possibility of oil leaching out in long-term storage.)
Comparative Ranking
Ranking it against other mold-making materials, I’d place SiliNOT! below platinum-cure silicone in terms of performance, but maybe somewhere in the neighborhood of urethane and tin-cure silicone. It's definitely superior to latex. (Though to be honest, I'd rank Play-Doh above latex. I hate working with that stuff.)
Factoring in cost and environmental impact, it beats out urethane and tin-cure silicone. I'm still not sure if I'd rank it above platinum-cure silicone, though... Silicone costs much more and isn't eco-friendly, but the performance and lifespan is significantly better, so it still makes more sense for some projects.
Alginate is another type of material entirely, but in some ways SiliNOT! is comparable to it -- both are more cost-effective than silicone, both are biodegradable, both are skin safe, and both have long shelf lives. But SiliNOT! is easier to use for beginners than alginate, which has to be mixed to the right consistency and has an extremely short lifespan once poured.
Overall, I would recommend SiliNOT! for:
People who want accurate, non-shrinking molds but don’t have the budget for platinum-cure silicone
People who are committed to eliminating waste from single-use materials, and are willing to trade off a little performance for a more eco-friendly material
Projects with smooth surfaces and no indentations/sharp edges/undercuts where bubbles might stick (e.g. cabochons; simple geometric forms)
Projects where you need only one or two casts of something, rather than many casts from the same mold
Casting oddly-shaped pieces around which the mold needs to stretch in order to demold
Use with slow-curing resins that do not generate much heat
I would NOT recommend SiliNOT! for:
Extremely complex or detailed pieces, or pieces with a lot of surface texture that bubbles might stick to
Two-part molds
Projects requiring many identical casts out of the same mold
Molds that you intend to add to your library for future or repeat casting
Use with fast-curing resins, melted wax, melted Monster Clay, or any other material that emits heat
Cold casting with precise color application
My Overall Opinion
It's... okay? I will almost certainly keep SiliNOT! in my toolkit for certain specific applications. It's MUCH cheaper over the long term, I love the idea of recycling mold material, and there are some projects for which it will likely perform very well (those listed in the above bullet points). I will also admit that three days of working with it does not constitute a comprehensive familiarity with the product, and it might be the sort of thing that you get better at working with after more practice. (Just learning how to eliminate bubbles would go a long way toward making me adopt this for more projects!)
However, I don't quite buy the "better than silicone" tagline. It's definitely more difficult to get a perfect result, and there are some projects for which platinum-cure silicone is always going to be more reliable (e.g. high-temperature casting, mass production, large-scale life casting).
For those looking for a recommendation of whether or not to buy, I'd say look at your project budget and the applications for which you're going to be making molds, and let those factors guide which mold material you go with. People doing some kinds of projects are likely going to find this a godsend, while those doing different projects would probably hate working with it.
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jack kelly 🤝 bobby
icons with dead dads who are played by corey cott and gave up their big dreams of leaving their city because they fell in love with their boss’ daughter
#am in love with the heart of rock and roll cast album#if you haven’t listened to it yet LISTEN TO IT NOW U WONT REGRET IT#it’s SUCH a good time#if anyone has a slime tutorial i will love you forever#newsies#heart of rock and roll#corey cott#jack kelly#newsies fandom#musicals
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#well this cast recording was an absolute pleasure to listen to#id say i wasnt familiar with its game but i think i was#ive just not been as invested in this one#darren does too much these days and im not 14 anymore to upkeep it all#but WOW#i see this doing numbers at the tonys#hope a slime tutorial will come about soon - i need to know more#(i know plot etc. just thats where ot ends really)#happy ending maybe#darren criss#dc#Spotify
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Why I Hate Suffs.
Spoiler alert, but in the movie “10 Things I Hate About You”, Kat Stratford reads a poem in front of her class in which she mentions all the reasons why she hates a guy and at the end she says “But mostly, I hate the way I don't hate you. Not even close, not even a little bit, not even at all.” And, well, that’s exactly why I hate Suffs.
I really tried hating Suffs. I live on the opposite side of the continent from the Music Box Theater. On the side where we consider ourselves “Americans” just by living on this land, even if we don’t live in the wealthiest country and where Christmas is spent wearing shorts and eating by the pool. Because of that, seeing Suffs this year was not an option for me. I love musical theater with every part of my being, but I’ve learnt that I have to ignore certain shows if I don’t want to spend months being sad because I can’t see them.
The problem was that I knew I was going to like Suffs, even if just a little. So my plan was to hate it instead. I believed every lie I read on the Internet about it that would help me with it. I ignored the cast album even when Spotify thought I should try listening to it. I didn’t even check the reviews when they came out because what would I do if they were good?
Everything was going perfectly, I convinced myself that Suffs was the worst show on Broadway, the kind that deserves bad reviews and empty seats. But then, I watched the Tony awards and I saw Shaina Taub win her second Tony of the night and curiosity got to me. The following day, I listened to the Cast Album for the first time.
Now, because I don’t live near Broadway, most of the knowledge I’ve gotten about shows comes from listening to cast albums. I’m one of those people who believe that music and lyrics are one of the most important parts of a musical. If they aren’t good, I don’t care if you put the Empire State Building on stage, I will not like the show. If you don’t make me feel something through words and sound, you won’t get my attention.
The first song I listened to was “Let Mother Vote” and it got my attention. Then everything else came and I just knew I was screwed. There was no way I was going to hate that musical after listening to the full album. It was smart, it had different styles, and it spoke to me in a unique way. Now, I wish everyone was willing to listen to it speak to them.
Suffs doesn’t tell my story, it doesn’t even tell the story of my ancestors. But even so, it fills my body with an array of emotions and my eyes with tears every time I listen to it. It would have been great if it had been a boring, educational show about politics. I would have been able to hate it. But the thing is that it’s so much more than that.
It’s a show that made me realize that women are not powerless like some people make us think we are. It’s convenient for them that we buy that lie, but it’s simply not true and Suffs proves it by showing the achievements of women who were deemed insane just because they wanted to be heard and seen. Women who not only believed in themselves, but also in collective power. They believed in having each other’s backs when the world turned theirs to them. Suffs showed me that we don’t have to be the same person, or think alike, to be able to fight for what is right. It showed me that even when we think we are alone, a woman next to us will hold up the sign and march with us. Women are powerful, especially when we are united. Especially when we decide to show the world that we are.
I wish I’d been able to hate Suffs. If I had, I wouldn’t have cried on Friday learning the news that the show will be closing in January. I wouldn’t be so mad at people who believed lies and built their opinions on nothing and won’t give it a chance when it’s such a relevant show -even if that was my original plan. I wish I could yell in their faces and ask them to pay attention, because if there’s a musical that needs to be seen and heard by everyone, it’s this one.
I recently saw a video of their cast album presentation and I cried seeing women from different generations there. That’s what Suffs is to me, a musical that’s not about being a certain age or from a certain historical time or from a specific country, it’s about being a woman. We know what that’s about, we know it’s not easy, but we are powerful, we are not alone and we have to keep marching for the ones that came before and the ones that will come, we can do it. I just love Suffs.
#Suffs#Broadway#Musicals#Cast Albums#Theater#Musical Theater#Tony Awards#Women#Suffs The Musical#Suffs Slime Tutorial
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#can you tell I’m excited about Evita#can’t wait for the cast recording#can’t wait to see a slime tutorial#can’t wait to see the pictures#can’t wait to be jealous of anyone who gets to go#millietalks
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