theplayground
New member
I have started sculpting bases and hopefully soon minis. I have made molds of the bases and have tried making copies with poured resin. I have been happy with the molds. They appear to have good detail and hold up well. The resin has not been giving me the results I am looking for. I have followed the directions on the bottles. Measured everything as well as I possibly could. (I did not pour out some of each and say that looks close enough.) After pouring and drying the pieces appear to have tiny pits. I have tried tapping both the molds and the table they are on to remove bubbles. I try to stir and pour slowly so I do not introduce air. Sanding does not help as it only reveals more tiny holes in the copy. When I prime them they look horrible. The name of the company for both the resin and mold maker I have been using is called, smooth on. If this was a poor brand choice on my behalf, please do not leave sny remarks. I try to shop local and this was the only product that appeared to be decent. In the future I would like to sculpt and cast miniatures on a small production basis. I want to treat this as a hobby. I hope to sell them in order to pay for materials so that I can continue to sculpt and produce minis. I do not think that I will ever make copious amounts of money in this venture. I just want the hobby to try and pay for itself. I do want to offer good quality. This is why I am asking for opinions about casting resin. I cannot afford a vacuum chamber. If you have any suggestions I would like to hear them.
In case temperature and humidity are a factor in your suggestions I live in central Florida.
Thanks for your time.
TJ
In case temperature and humidity are a factor in your suggestions I live in central Florida.
Thanks for your time.
TJ