How to Use Epoxy Resin Deep Pour for Casting and Encasing Objects
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 15. 07. 2020
- Deep Pour Epoxy đwww.upstartepoxy.com/products...
This is a step-by-step guide for casting and encasing objects with Deep Pour Epoxy Resin. You can create custom pieces with wood, molds, and more!
DEEP POUR epoxy resin is available now on our website, along with our crystal clear Table Top Epoxy Resin: www.upstartepoxy.com/collecti...
Upstart Epoxy's DEEP POUR has the ability to cast up to 2" thick, making it perfect for river tables, ocean tables, wall art, furniture, casting in silicone molds, knife scales and handles, pens, and more. Mix in color pigments, and the possibilities are endless!
Our Table Top Epoxy Resin is great for coffee tables, kitchen countertops, bathroom countertops, bars, canvases, tumblers, and much more.
Questions?
Website - www.upstartepoxy.com//?oid=11...
Email - support@upstartepoxy.com
Phone - (844) 247-3444
Monday - Friday 9AM - 5PM CST
SuperGloss Upstart Epoxy - Crystal Clear Epoxy You Can Trust đ€
â Proudly Made In USA
â Easy Mixing Ratio
â Food Safe (complies t o the standards listed in FDA 21 CFR 175.300 for food contact)
â Crystal Clear
â Self Leveling
â High Gloss
â Water-Resistant Coating
â Non-Yellowing
â Consistent Viscosity
â U.V. Resistant
â No VOC's
â Low Odor
â No bubbles
#epoxy #epoxytutorial #upstartepoxy - Jak na to + styl
Deep Pour Epoxy đwww.upstartepoxy.com/products/deep-pour-epoxy-resin/?oid=11&affid=606&source_id=youtube
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I just subscribed and liked! Iâm hoping you could provide me with links to all of the materials used in this video, Iâd like to use the same colors and Iâm going to encase bic lighters to create a table top that will serve as a slide out table top for glassblowing in my camper! Thanks in advance and I love the channel!
@@nicholaslachapelle6256 Hi Nicholas, thanks for watching and I appreciate you reaching out! Here are the product links that were used in this video:
www.upstartepoxy.com/products/epoxy-resin-table-top
www.upstartepoxy.com/products/deep-pour-epoxy-resin
www.upstartepoxy.com/products/epoxy-resin-dye-mica-powder-25-powdered-pigments-set
Thanks for your support!
@@nicholaslachapelle6256 Hi Nicholas, thanks for watching and for supporting!
Here's the link to the deep pour product that was used:
www.upstartepoxy.com/products/deep-pour-epoxy-resin
Colors- www.upstartepoxy.com/products/epoxy-resin-dye-mica-powder-25-powdered-pigments-set
Table Top - www.upstartepoxy.com/products/epoxy-resin-table-top
Hope this helps!
you all probably dont care but does someone know a trick to get back into an Instagram account??
I was stupid forgot the password. I would love any help you can offer me.
@Finnley London instablaster =)
I love it!! I have been considering a project like this in the thick depth over a floor. I have to prepare the floor but this shows how I can do it. I may be touch once I get to that point. Thanks for the video!
Great! Thanks, Tim! Can't wait for your projects!
This turned out so nice! Inspiring me to do something very similar. Thank you for posting!
Elated to know that you find this inspiring! Good luck on your project!đ
Awesome piece!!
Great project. Fab colour combo! Greetings from the UK đ
Thank you!
Very informative đ, great video!
Glad you think so!
Great info. very well presented subscribed.
Thank you, Iâve learned SO much!
You are so welcome!
Applies blow torch copiously then says, "I cannot stress this enough: do not apply fire to live ammunition. Use alcohol, like this." haha! Rock on! This is a beautiful piece.
đ€Ł Thanks for watching!
Good info
Fantasticđđ
Thanks!
Risking your life for art. I love it †subbed
Thank you so much đ
@@upstartepoxy4804 LMAO, risking your life for art! Should I wear my vest from my LE days ????
Bravo magnifique đđđ
Thanks for watching, Tony!
Good tutorial. Why on the last coat did you pour into a second cup and then restir?
Iâm just starting out what do u use for the first pour for the base of the shell casings?
I have a really dumb question. I would like to make a table and include some of my cdâs that Iâve collected over the years. How would I best encapsulate the cdâs and incorporate them into the pour with as clear as results as the copper pieces you used here? Obviously Iâm also worried about the epoxy seeping into the case, would it ruin the paper, if so? Sorry for the newbie questions. Iâm just looking into this for the first time.Thank you in advance if you have any advice.
You're the first one I've seen that does the deep pour right over everything and then the top coat on that. Usually people just deep pour up to the top of the wood, do their planing / sanding then, then do the top coat. Can you explain the advantages / disadvantages of how you did it and would you do it that way on a bigger project?
I have a table that I am working on right now and would like to know the same thing. It would be great if he would answer the questions people have. đ€š
Your channel has very good information, thanks. I have a QUESTION, I have to piece of burl from an overgrowth stump. I intend to make a hand-carved bowl, but there is a 1.5 inch hole plus a 2 inch by 6 inch damage area about .5 inches deep that I want to fill. which type of epoxy should I use? Casting or Deep Pour? Your comments will be greatly appreciated. Thank-you
That is nice
Thank you!
Have you done a lot of epoxy boards with live ammo?
Hey buddy love the project I am actually about to start a project with military theme for my brother, xmas present. this will be a first for me beside a table I did years ago that was just screwing around. I will be using a paper camo print out for a background, i was thinking pouring a thin coat and laying the camo print out in it letting it dry and that pouring a thin coat over that to seal it. once that's dry i was going to super glue the patches, bullets and supplies to the cured resin and doing a deep pour over the top of that maybe 2 inches. is there something i should be doing in-between layers, will they adhere together good. is there any advice you can give me on the project all together im in about 600 bucks and i really dont have the budget to screw up and start again. any advice would be greatly appreciated. i have a mock up pic if your interested to get a general idea. Thank you
How long do you let the first pour cure before the second pour?
if the objects are not clean or old then what should you spray on them say they are old vintage and you can't clean them
Great job and video! Question, I saw you were doing a 1-1 ratio on your resin pour and mixed 64 oz total. But in the video you measured 42 oz of part 1 and used part two to get to 64 oz total. Is it not that critical getting the exact 1-1 ratio on this kind of thing?
You've conflated two things here. The _first_ part of the pour uses the pewter _Casting_ Resin, which is 1-1 by volume. He measured both parts to 16oz at timestamp 1:47
Halfway through (timestamp 7:09), he switched to Clear Coat _Deep Pour_ Resin, which has a different ratio of 2-1 because it's a different kind of resin, poured to a different depth.
The second resin is a *2 to 1 ratio,* so if he wanted 64oz in total of Deep Pour, that would involve 42.5oz of Pt 1, and 31.5oz of Pt 2, which is exactly what he used!
So yes, accurate measurements are vital. Did you skip part of the video, perhaps?! đ€
Is epoxy UV resistant? long lasting?
I want to do something like this but with cork. If I do a thin layer first and then deep pour how long do I have to wait between layers? Then do I have to sand them between layers?
Hi Bradley! đY es, you need to sand them between layers for adhesion. For the thin layer first, you can wait for 6-9 hrs before you can pour the flood pour using Deep Pour. Then after pouring the deep pour, you need to wait until 72 hours to cure, depending on your ambient conditions.
Question.. I see people using polish and wax after making their pieces to make it see-through. Is this just another method? Adding gloss/table top epoxy? And would it differ with using it over wood as well?
Yes, it's one way of making your piece see-through especially if you're casting clear. If it's applied to the wood, it will seal in everything and it makes sure thereâs no line or rigid area and your base layer, itâs all one smooth, glossy surface.
Only on American channels have I ever seen any resin art with _bullets_ in it. It never fails to jolt me, I'm afraid... đł
That aside, I love the chunky quality - you've created a really beautiful finish here, and you present with an easy style and wit.
nice video, if I wanted to embed my sculptures which are quite big 35x40x55cm is that possible with this epoxy? what should I use as case (to prevent heat) and how thick my pour layers should be? thanks
Embedding sculptures would be a good idea! You need to build your form/case first for your mold. Deep Pour can fill in up to 2" or more. If you need your project to have resin that is 4 inches thick, or maybe six inches, all you have to do is work in 2in increments - which means you can only pour two inches at a time, let that completely harden, then do two more.
@@upstartepoxy4804 Thanks a lot, how long it take to fully cure between layers? thanks
@@oxhid3 Table Top for SuperGloss Coatingâs working time is 20-30 minutes, tack-free time is 6-8 hours, and cured at 24. For Deep pour, 6 hours working time and 72 hours cure time depending on ambient temperature, humidity, and thickness!
Nice Job, are those dummies rounds? I have been told that epoxy can get hot enough to fire a round of Live ammo. Thanks
Not at all. Although epoxy would exotherm to the extent it may draw smoke but only if you left a massive quantity in the mixing container for an extended period of time and never poured or was dipping things into it.
Hoping to ask a question. I have a wood box that I wanted to put some shoes and other decorations in and then pour resin over the whole thing. Is that something doable or am I starting out way too complex?
Wow, sounds cool! You'll need a lot of resit to cover shoes, but sounds fun! Let us know how it turns out!
It's doable! You will need the Deep pour for this type of project. You just need to measure your wood box to figure out how much resin is needed for your project! Contact us at support@upstartepoxy.com to discuss more, this sounds like a blast to make!
Great video. You said "send us your project ideas..." How would we do that? via this CZcams channel or some other direct contact? I am thinking of doing an Intarsia wood carving a tropical fish tank. Basic dimensions are 12x14". The bottom of the art will be either solid wood or birch plywood with maybe a light airbrush to simulate blue water, Then the various fishes, corels, shells, seaweed will all be hand carved pieces of hard woods like Redheart, Yellowheart, Apsen, Wenge, Bubinga, cherry etc rising above the base maybe 1/4 to 1/2". I would like to encase the pieces in clear epoxy so the depth of the pour is modest, well under 1". I take it I would need to create some kind of form around the art work, pour, wait and then some sanding to cleanup followed with the finish coat which ideally results in a crystal clear tank. After than I may build another wood frame to encase the whole project. I have not done epoxy work before thus watching these videos. But I worry that maybe the expensive hand card exotic art project might get altered when encased in epoxy. So any suggestions are helpful
What tape did you line the box with?
Hi Danielle, we use sheathing tapes like Tyvek or Tuck tapes to prevent the table from sticking to the form.
Live ammo?
ThanksâŠ
Thanks for watching Norman!
If youâre pouring something that will take several pours due to the depth, how to you ensure the color will match exact? I need to put transparent blue for a water scene but Iâm not sure how to get the different batches to be 100% the same shade of blue.
Good luck, dude! Let us know how it turns out!
Measure out your colorant on the first mix then replicate it
You can add the blue color in small amounts, and start with an eighth of a teaspoon and add gradually while mixing! Measure your pigments on the first mix then duplicate it to ensure your colors will match! đš
By following a recipe - in the same way that you ensure a cake always rises and comes out the same every time - you measure your ingredients. I'm not sure I understand your question otherwise - I'd have thought measuring would be an automatic first step, unless you were thinking of doing it by eye?
Suggest you get yourself a set of digital scales with a _tare_ button, and note the weight difference (in tenths of a gram) once you've add your pigment in your first round. Bon chance! đ«đ·
Is their any problems when you use live ammo? Can you just use a heat gun ?
Hi Brian! We recommend only using casings. Not bullets/live ammos. Yes, you can use a heat gun.
Can I use color inks for coloring the resin?
If you mean _alcohol_ inks - yes you can, but they're a *dye* not a pigment, so they're fugitive.
Acrylic inks, yes - but strictly no more than 10% water-based products as it will affect your cure. Best stick to either pigment liquid, paste, or powder for a stable colour.
Hey man how hard do you think it would be to actally get started as a novice?
Not at all especially if you use our epoxy kits.
What kind of alcohol did you use and what was the percentage?
Hi Lewis, we use denatured alcohol. As to the percentage, it depends but we recommend starting just small amounts.
No sealing of the wood edges needed?
Hi Wald! Sealing the edges is important :)
Did you have to add a second layer of deep pour or no?
You can add a second layer if the wood absorbs and the epoxy level drops.
Do you need to use casting resin first or can you do the deep pour in two batches?
How long do you have to wait for the resin to be able to support an object on it if youâre doing something really small
Cure time is approximately 72 hours, based on ambient conditions. For best results, do not use it for one week, until it has reached its full strength.
@@upstartepoxy4804 Sorry, I may have misworded this. I mean to embed an object inside the resin. How long do I wait to put a small object on then finish the pour?
@@RealRaven6229 you can embed an object when the first pour is tacky or hard to the touch, approximately 4-6 hours.
@@upstartepoxy4804 thanks!!!!
I wanna do a table like this.. all Iv done is insects so far.
You can definitely achieve this!
Must be the most American thing I've seen today. ''Let's throw in some bullets Earl''
lol
Do you understand that live bullets could still fire
if the house catches fire the fire department will have a surprise.
"Optical bond"
Good info
Thank you for watching, Leon! We're so glad you liked this tutorial đ