I've spent the last couple of days scouring websites and reading up on moulding and casting materials. It seems there is nothing you can't make providing you can sift through the mountain of information on materials and techniques, oh, and you can afford to buy it all of course. I find it all very exciting but at the same time I'm quite befuddled by the different types of materials including resins. I did buy some general purpose polyester resin as polyester stuff is what I was familiar with, having spent some of my childhood encapsulating any unsuspecting bug in the water clear kind. What a cruel child I was, but I did move on to making polymer clay models and casting them instead. What does amaze me, with all of the health and safety data included these days, is how it was non existent then. This was in a kid's craft set back in the 70s and I did this in my parent's kitchen, well, before being sent to play in the garage. The stuff stinks, in a real toxic kind of way, they recommend masks now and I used to get covered in it. It would never wash off, instead turning black from all of the fluff and dirt that adhered to its stickiness. Well what I didn't know then, but do now is that acetone will do the job. So anyway, this is very much an experimental journey, and not being ready to get plastered or unleash the smelly toxic resin fumes, I thought I would dig out these hand casts I did a couple of years ago with alginate and crystacast, and start by trying to seal them with the idea of then applying test materials, hopefully stiffen them (somehow) with the intention of pulling the material back off and it retaining the cast form. So far they have had a coat of shellac.
My kitchen that has gradually been morphing into a studio is now going to become a workshop too I'm thinking. Ah well, eating is overrated.
During my searches I came across this useful site, (for me anyway) and there is an interesting bit on the resin casting of Rachel Whiteread's 'Monument'.
http://www.smooth-on.com/gallery.php?galleryid=173
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