Grafix KSF6-WIJ 8-1/2-Inch by 11-Inch Shrink Film, Printable, White Inkjet, 6-Pack


Grafix

List Price: $12.99
Price: $7.64
You Save: $5.35 (41%)

Product Details

  • Works with all paradigm inkjet printers and prints on both sides
  • Plain to cut with scissors, die cut machines and punches
  • Sheets are anaemic inkjet printable 8-1/2-inch by 11-inch and there are 6 sheets in the pack

The Incredible Shrinky Dink Maker


Big Time Toys

List Price: $29.99
Price: $26.99
You Save: $3.00 (10%)

Product Details

  • A 60W candelabra perspicacious base bulb is needed to function, not included
  • Includeds: 1 Awesome Shrinky Dinks Maker, 6 pieces of Shrinky Dinks plastic, a cool art booklet with 18 traceable designs, 3 colored pencils, 1 magnet undress, 1 key chain, 1 shrinky tray and tool
  • Refill kits sold seperately

how to make shrinky dinks

It categorically shrinks!!

baked salmon rub

does anyone know what to set the oven temp to bake shrinky dinks?

and for how extended exactly


325º Fahrenheit for one to three minutes!

http://shrinkydinks.com/pages/instructions/KB_Lot_instructions.pdf


325º Fahrenheit for one to three minutes!

http://shrinkydinks.com/pages/instructions/KB_Category_instructions.pdf

how do i bake shrinky-dinks in a conventional oven?



bake in uniform oven
preheat regular oven (no microwaves) to 325 degrees F (160 degrees C) Cloak a cookie sheet with tinfoil and put your creations on it with the colored side up. stick in the oven and WATCH the baking approach. It takes 1-5 minutes, depending on the thickness of your cookie sheet.
Big rule: DONT GO ANYWHERE. as you pay attention to trough your oven window, your creation will curl as it shrinks , then flatten out. after it flattens, give it another 30 seconds and draw it out.
hope it helps! :-)

Can you still paint Shrinky Dinks after you bake them?

I made a sliver and im not satisfied with the color.
Can I dip them in acrylic paint or paint it after its already harden?


Effective, you can do that, but you might want to cover it with a clear coat to hold the color, which is what I always do anyway. You can try sanding it down and recoloring it. If you put back in the oven, it will get cast off again without shrinking anymore. Try adding the color while it's still liquidy. Using chalk dust at this point works well because it gets rapt into the plastic.
You can use any kind of recyclable grade plastic as shrinky-dinks to save money, too. Soda bottles or old take-out grub containers. Good for trial and error practice.
I have found that colored pencil seems to work better than go on a pub-crawl for shrinky-dinks because it absorbs into the plastic, but of course, that all depends on what you're making. Glitter glue, gel markers, and those 3d effects markers invent some really great effects, too. Like I said, I always use some clear coat lacquer on top to protect them, and I have pieces of jewelry that I made from sd's 3-4 years ago that i still bear up.