@@joshuahardingham7784 Yes, this specific design would be easy enough with a vinyl cutter but when you want something very detailed or halftone photos, photo resist is the way to go. Also I just finished doing 120 glasses for a wedding with their own logo and about 20 rocks with the logo and I can't imagine doing all that quickly with a vinyl cutter. I wish I had access to a big vinyl cutter so I could do large designs for boulders but there isn't one in our small town. Really deep cutting on rocks is where I think the vinyl cutter would be great and maybe even essential.
It's about the detail. If you have very fine detail the cricut won't do it. I have both systems. Also you have to weed the cricut design and you wash out the inkjet film which is faster especially with more detail.
@@jollyandwaylo have u tried the rapid mask? Im curious which handles finer detail the best. Im getting like 97% of what I want w rapid mask 2mm but the mask lets go in some situations. Hoping the glue in the washout stuff is like stoopid strong? Edit in reference to sections under a .5-.1mm
@@jollyandwaylo Yes washing out is faster but here it seems like more of a waste of time, especially with this design. Weeding is faster than all the steps taken here to get the same results. I've done a Barq's Rootbeer logo on a mug and it turned out perfect. The weeding takes long depending on what look you're going for. If a lot of the pieces you have to weed are connected then it goes pretty quickly.
@@pjbiggleswerth8903 it can. I've done portraits and a Barqs rootbeer logo on a mug and they come out perfect. Look up the rootbeer logo and see how detailed the tree portion is.
Great video!!
What kind of paint would you recommend for coffee mugs that are going to have high heat?
Please where do get those equipment used and the materials
Can the same blasting be used to engrave on glasses made from cut beer bottles?
Is it ceramic glass ?
Do you just use regular spray paint? Is that food safe? Will it stand up to dishwashing and microwaving?
Seems like a huge stuff around, Just get a vinyl cutter!?
You can not get nearly the amount of detail with a vinyl cutter
@@tmiddleton100 With the right settings and material you can quite easily replicate that design
@@joshuahardingham7784 Yes, this specific design would be easy enough with a vinyl cutter but when you want something very detailed or halftone photos, photo resist is the way to go. Also I just finished doing 120 glasses for a wedding with their own logo and about 20 rocks with the logo and I can't imagine doing all that quickly with a vinyl cutter. I wish I had access to a big vinyl cutter so I could do large designs for boulders but there isn't one in our small town. Really deep cutting on rocks is where I think the vinyl cutter would be great and maybe even essential.
They don’t have that model of printer in NZ. What would you recommend?
It looks like after blasting you removed the mask. Did you remask to paint ?
No. Lui ha mascherato 2 tazze per fare 2 esempi, una con il colore finale e una senza colore.
what kind of spay paint did you use. and is it pemanent
Hello, we used a weather-resistant acrylic paint for this ceramic mug. Yes, the color is permanent.
Excellent video thanks. Could you please tell me what spray is used? Thank you.
Or...you can just cut that image on a cricut, place the vinyl on the cup and sand blast it just the same. But to each their own.
I don’t think circut can get as detailed
It's about the detail. If you have very fine detail the cricut won't do it. I have both systems. Also you have to weed the cricut design and you wash out the inkjet film which is faster especially with more detail.
@@jollyandwaylo have u tried the rapid mask? Im curious which handles finer detail the best. Im getting like 97% of what I want w rapid mask 2mm but the mask lets go in some situations. Hoping the glue in the washout stuff is like stoopid strong? Edit in reference to sections under a .5-.1mm
@@jollyandwaylo Yes washing out is faster but here it seems like more of a waste of time, especially with this design. Weeding is faster than all the steps taken here to get the same results. I've done a Barq's Rootbeer logo on a mug and it turned out perfect. The weeding takes long depending on what look you're going for. If a lot of the pieces you have to weed are connected then it goes pretty quickly.
@@pjbiggleswerth8903 it can. I've done portraits and a Barqs rootbeer logo on a mug and they come out perfect. Look up the rootbeer logo and see how detailed the tree portion is.