Mr. Heining has a point that inflating a mousehead balloon takes practice and is easier said than done. I can also inflate the same type of mousehead balloon, but not as fast as Treb can, and have not put a mousehead balloon in a clear 20 inch Deco Bubble before. I can inflate a mousehead balloon and make it look right, with both the ears nearly the same size, a nice even "bridge" between the ears, and the head a nice proportion in size from 1½ to 2 times the size of one of the ears in terms of helium, nitrogen gas capacity. From my experience, each ear gets the same gas capacity as a 260 balloon fully inflated. (260 balloons should not be helium filled, just giving a comparable comparison for air in terms of cubic feet.) A 260 is the standard long balloon used by twisters for balloon animals, swords, etc. Very few people know how to inflate a mousehead balloon, especially since there is little demand for mousehead balloons, and also most people would give up too easily. Most professional balloon decorators don't even know how, as most will not get into a situation where these balloons are requested by the client.
@@dukedave7 I have used both a 24 inch Deco Bubble and a 20 inch Deco Bubble with a Qualatex 15 inch mousehead latex balloons inside of them, and the mousehead will fit inside both of them. I KNOW HOW TO INFLATE A MOUSEHEAD BALLOON, WITH OR WITHOUT A DECO BUBBLE, BUT VERY FEW PEOPLE DO. I wish more people knew how, and that mousehead balloons were in far greater demand than they are. They would not have been discontinued (from the Qualatex catalog listing) if that was the case. The Disney parks use the 20 inch Deco Bubble for the iconic mousehead latex balloons since it takes less helium to fill it. I prefer the 24 inch Deco Bubble for the inside mousehead latex balloon since I can fill the mousehead balloon to its full size and it looks better. It's a shame that Qualatex discontinued the mousehead latex balloons, because most people don't know how to properly inflate them.
@@wadessirenvideos6750 I am sad that this has been discontinued too... Only have 50 red ones left. By the way, I have purchased a few in the past from Disneyland to test the float time, they were all 24" bubbles. I guess the 20" were/are probably been/in use and would float too.
@@dukedave7 Great to hear from you, and enjoyed reading your comment. Mousehead balloons are the most difficult latex balloons I have ever inflated. The Geo Blossom is fairly difficult to get the shape perfect; I inflate the top of the Geo Blossom first while keeping pressure on the bottom and the neck of course and then work from the top down. The base of this shape latex balloon, likewise with a Geo Donut, will naturally inflate first, unless you restrain it somehow. Overinflating the base looks bad and makes tying the neck unnecessarily difficult.
@@aidenn805 Technically, he didn't invent them, he just revolutionized them. There was a balloon manufacturer in Japan called TK Innovations, and they used to produce the clear bubble balloons up to 15", he asked them to produce them in 24".
I have the same balloon like that. Can you please upload a tutorial video how to inflate mickey mouse ear balloon because I have a hard time inflating it using with my disposable helium canister
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If you talk to Treb on a regular basis, tell him that his niece on Grandma Peggy's side says hello. :)
Mr. Heining has a point that inflating a mousehead balloon takes practice and is easier said than done. I can also inflate the same type of mousehead balloon, but not as fast as Treb can, and have not put a mousehead balloon in a clear 20 inch Deco Bubble before. I can inflate a mousehead balloon and make it look right, with both the ears nearly the same size, a nice even "bridge" between the ears, and the head a nice proportion in size from 1½ to 2 times the size of one of the ears in terms of helium, nitrogen gas capacity. From my experience, each ear gets the same gas capacity as a 260 balloon fully inflated. (260 balloons should not be helium filled, just giving a comparable comparison for air in terms of cubic feet.) A 260 is the standard long balloon used by twisters for balloon animals, swords, etc. Very few people know how to inflate a mousehead balloon, especially since there is little demand for mousehead balloons, and also most people would give up too easily. Most professional balloon decorators don't even know how, as most will not get into a situation where these balloons are requested by the client.
It's a 24" deco bubble by the way, 20" ones are too small to house the inner balloon.
@@dukedave7 I have used both a 24 inch Deco Bubble and a 20 inch Deco Bubble with a Qualatex 15 inch mousehead latex balloons inside of them, and the mousehead will fit inside both of them. I KNOW HOW TO INFLATE A MOUSEHEAD BALLOON, WITH OR WITHOUT A DECO BUBBLE, BUT VERY FEW PEOPLE DO. I wish more people knew how, and that mousehead balloons were in far greater demand than they are. They would not have been discontinued (from the Qualatex catalog listing) if that was the case. The Disney parks use the 20 inch Deco Bubble for the iconic mousehead latex balloons since it takes less helium to fill it. I prefer the 24 inch Deco Bubble for the inside mousehead latex balloon since I can fill the mousehead balloon to its full size and it looks better. It's a shame that Qualatex discontinued the mousehead latex balloons, because most people don't know how to properly inflate them.
@@wadessirenvideos6750 I am sad that this has been discontinued too... Only have 50 red ones left. By the way, I have purchased a few in the past from Disneyland to test the float time, they were all 24" bubbles. I guess the 20" were/are probably been/in use and would float too.
@@dukedave7 Great to hear from you, and enjoyed reading your comment. Mousehead balloons are the most difficult latex balloons I have ever inflated. The Geo Blossom is fairly difficult to get the shape perfect; I inflate the top of the Geo Blossom first while keeping pressure on the bottom and the neck of course and then work from the top down. The base of this shape latex balloon, likewise with a Geo Donut, will naturally inflate first, unless you restrain it somehow. Overinflating the base looks bad and makes tying the neck unnecessarily difficult.
I want a Mickey mouse balloon
Lmao you made them like Disney's, they put the same exact light stick inside
skellington _1993 he’s the one who invented those balloons. He used to work at Disneyland
@@aidenn805 Technically, he didn't invent them, he just revolutionized them. There was a balloon manufacturer in Japan called TK Innovations, and they used to produce the clear bubble balloons up to 15", he asked them to produce them in 24".
I have the same balloon like that. Can you please upload a tutorial video how to inflate mickey mouse ear balloon because I have a hard time inflating it using with my disposable helium canister
loveit