damn im here looking the same answers hahaha, i watched a video before in which they used the roots of a kind ob hibiscus that makes the same consistency, i think it acts as an agglutinative, thats why i think it could be replaced with some kind of starch, anyways i find this hiromipaper.com/blogs/newsletter/tororo-aoi and this the video i mentioned th-cam.com/video/5pDsTahjAAU/w-d-xo.html the roots of hibiscus apears on 20:45
@@xilo7205 hey, thanks a lot for sharing but I’m looking for a more commercial way of doing it instead of relying on the plant directly. I’m a textile designer from London and I’m working on this project at the moment. Thanks a lot tho, I also read somewhere that okra and aloe Vera gel does the job but I’m still experimenting.
Hey, where can I buy Tororo aoi in the Uk? Or is there any alternative for tororo aoi
damn im here looking the same answers hahaha, i watched a video before in which they used the roots of a kind ob hibiscus that makes the same consistency, i think it acts as an agglutinative, thats why i think it could be replaced with some kind of starch, anyways i find this hiromipaper.com/blogs/newsletter/tororo-aoi
and this the video i mentioned
th-cam.com/video/5pDsTahjAAU/w-d-xo.html the roots of hibiscus apears on 20:45
@@xilo7205 hey, thanks a lot for sharing but I’m looking for a more commercial way of doing it instead of relying on the plant directly. I’m a textile designer from London and I’m working on this project at the moment. Thanks a lot tho, I also read somewhere that okra and aloe Vera gel does the job but I’m still experimenting.
@@9755625335 I wonder if you could use agar agar as a replacement for a more commercialized operation.
@@9755625335 any results? saw a video where, yes, someone put frozen cut okra for plant paper. worked excellently. lost link.
Where is part 2 of this video?