+Christelle Vanderwesthuizen The Chavant Y2-Klay is a modeling clay, so you probably won't seen a whole lot of adherence to surfaces while at room temperature. You might have some, but it's not really what this product is designed for.
You mentioned if you use Y2-Klay as a plug for mold making, the original clay form is destroyed. My question is, can the clay itself be recovered and reused or does the application of the PVA ruin the clay itself?
I got a project I'm working on...and to re-use the clay I just had to make sure not to use a platinum silicone and then a tin silicone with the same clay.
what is the difference between the y2 klay and NSP (hard)?
I've got a question. Could you tell us a bit on what surfaces it works best with?? does it stick to plastic, wood, rock etc... ??
+Christelle Vanderwesthuizen The Chavant Y2-Klay is a modeling clay, so you probably won't seen a whole lot of adherence to surfaces while at room temperature. You might have some, but it's not really what this product is designed for.
You mentioned if you use Y2-Klay as a plug for mold making, the original clay form is destroyed. My question is, can the clay itself be recovered and reused or does the application of the PVA ruin the clay itself?
scott loong There will typically be some waste, but overall the clay can typically be reused.
depends on your mold making honestly
I got a project I'm working on...and to re-use the clay I just had to make sure not to use a platinum silicone and then a tin silicone with the same clay.