

Suremold urethane elastomers can be used for hard cast marble-like replications in a wide range of applications and final appearances
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Silicones are usually the brush-on mold-making material selected when casting urethane products or any product requiring fine detail. Silicones do not shrink and work well with adjustable amounts of catalysts for desired cure time.
SureMold Silcone is usually the best mold-making material for first time mold-makers to acheive top results and desired appearance. Silicone molds are usually the best mold for repeated use when multiple duplications of the part or product are desired from the same mold. |
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Latex Rubber is a common material used in mold-making because it is tough, durable, pliable and less expensive than silicone. It is an affordable brush-on mold-making material for reproducing large sculptures, architectural restorations and making large production molds.
Liquid Rubbers can be used for a variety of mold applications from wax candle molds to concrete stamping molds with adjustable cure time allowing unhurried work. |
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Plaster Of Paris is a reliable, effective, easy-to-find mold material for many molded products. Select the product to mold, use two small equally sized plastic trays that together are slightly larger and higher than the selcted product you wish to duplicate. Wax the interior of your new inexpensive two-part master mold with a quality paste wax.
To duplicate a typical 4 inch foam football, Pour enough dry Plaster Of Paris into another container, add water, mix thoroughly than pour it deep enough into the first container to push one half of the football in the container with at one inch of Plaster Of Paris remaining under the football. After Plaster Of Paris has set up with enough cure time, neatly trim it if necessary, for a flush straight line around the exact center of the ball. Wax the Plaster Of Paris around the ball and the exposed portion of the ball . Mix enough Plaster Of Paris in a second equal container to cover the exposed portion of the ball with an inch of Plaster Of Paris remaining. Reverse the first half of Master mold with ball in it upside down and place it firmly into the Plaster Of Paris in the second container. Place a strong rubber band or two around the now joined containers and wait until the second side cures. Remove the bands, separate the two mold halves, remove the ball, lightly trim and brush and imperfections in cured Plaster Of Paris mold halves, if necessary. Wax your new football mold and pour SureMold 20 grams of equally mixed SWD football polyurethane foam into one half of the mold, place the 2nd half of mold on top and place strong rubber bands or other securing devices around the mold to tightly hold the two halves of the mold together as the foam expands. Remove the easy-to-make, fun-to-throw football after 4 hours. Color tints can be added after you get the hang of it. |
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