This is exactly what I was looking for to build a forest diorama! Thanks! Edit: I'm trying to find the products you used and when you gesture to the carton I think you call it "contour sheet plaster," but I'm not sure because I cant find it. What exactly is it?
Is this heavy after it dries? I am trying to make branches for a theater production that people will need to hold/fake attack another actor and wondered if the plaster would make it too hard. I wonder if I can just stop at the masking tape and paint it from there.
Would this be strong enough to hold a live chameleon? Im looking to make some branches that she can actually use. The store bought ones are too small for her enclosure and found ones present the risk of parasites and bacteria that could kill her.
Thanks for reaching out to us and your interest in our products. We are not as concerned about the strength of the materials (Plaster Cloth coated with Shaper Sheet® Plaster makes a firm, hard shell), but more about whether or not the materials are a suitable habitat for a chameleon. As we have not tested these materials in the manner you describe, we cannot provide guidance on whether or not they are a suitable habitat for a live chameleon.
Hi Jason! So we can best answer your question, could you please tell us if you are wanting to create a tip of the deer antlers or a larger portion of the rack? Also, are you wanting to use just Plaster Cloth?
@@scenes-n-nature4669 i got a rack that has the last 4 inches of the main beam broke. Could i use a peice of wire and the plaster cloth to build that last 4 inches?
@@jasonpine2061 Hi Jason! We appreciate the additional information and your patience in our response. We do not recommend using Plaster Cloth and wire to rebuild a broken main beam on antlers. Plaster Cloth is not an ideal material for weight-bearing applications like re-building the main beam on an antler would require. Please let us know if you have any additional questions and for your interest in our products.
Hi, this give me an idea of what I want to do. I just have a doubt… after letting it dry, can it be placed in a humid environment (or be in contact with water) or will it loose its consistency?
Busque demasiados videos y ninguno me convencio, como su técnica, es Genial.
Gracias. 👍🏻
You two are awesome
Hey, thanks! :) We have fun making custom habitats!
This is exactly what I was looking for to build a forest diorama! Thanks! Edit: I'm trying to find the products you used and when you gesture to the carton I think you call it "contour sheet plaster," but I'm not sure because I cant find it. What exactly is it?
Is this heavy after it dries? I am trying to make branches for a theater production that people will need to hold/fake attack another actor and wondered if the plaster would make it too hard. I wonder if I can just stop at the masking tape and paint it from there.
Would this be strong enough to hold a live chameleon? Im looking to make some branches that she can actually use. The store bought ones are too small for her enclosure and found ones present the risk of parasites and bacteria that could kill her.
Thanks for reaching out to us and your interest in our products. We are not as concerned about the strength of the materials (Plaster Cloth coated with Shaper Sheet® Plaster makes a firm, hard shell), but more about whether or not the materials are a suitable habitat for a chameleon. As we have not tested these materials in the manner you describe, we cannot provide guidance on whether or not they are a suitable habitat for a live chameleon.
Habitat FX series by Smooth On might work, it seems to be designed for aquatic and zoo habitats :
th-cam.com/video/Tw8h4P80UT4/w-d-xo.html
Could the plaster cloth be used to build broken deer antlers
Hi Jason! So we can best answer your question, could you please tell us if you are wanting to create a tip of the deer antlers or a larger portion of the rack? Also, are you wanting to use just Plaster Cloth?
@@scenes-n-nature4669 i got a rack that has the last 4 inches of the main beam broke. Could i use a peice of wire and the plaster cloth to build that last 4 inches?
@@jasonpine2061 Hi Jason! We appreciate the additional information and your patience in our response. We do not recommend using Plaster Cloth and wire to rebuild a broken main beam on antlers. Plaster Cloth is not an ideal material for weight-bearing applications like re-building the main beam on an antler would require. Please let us know if you have any additional questions and for your interest in our products.
Hi, this give me an idea of what I want to do. I just have a doubt… after letting it dry, can it be placed in a humid environment (or be in contact with water) or will it loose its consistency?
What did you end up doing? Great to hear people creating