🎨 Mold Your Imagination into Reality!
The LET'S RESIN Silicone Mold Making Kit includes 140oz of platinum-cured, non-toxic silicone that is easy to mix and pour with a 1:1 ratio. Designed for both beginners and experienced crafters, it eliminates bubbles automatically and cures within 6-12 hours, making it ideal for a variety of DIY projects like resin casting, candle making, and more.
S**F
Worked great, easy to use!
I got this to put on my dog's muzzle (he's not nice to my other dogs), so it would be more gentle on my windows, than just the metal muzzle. It took a bit of trial and error to see what would work-I was hoping to be able to dip it multiple times, but ended up having to set it in a form and then cut out the area in-between the bars . . . it turned out great!! Also, very easy to work with, and hardened quickly- 4 hrs or so!
M**G
Great mold making mix
These mix easily and allow great detail in the molds. The mold is flexible and easy to use.
C**F
works well
I am a beginner at making molds and this has made it extremely easy to do
J**N
Great silicone mold kit!
Did the diy keyboard hack to make a silicone pad for my mechanical keyboard. The silicone mix turned out perfect! The pad I made was rather thick and it hardened totally through with no issues. It has the standard fun to feel texture and flexibility. Overall this is a great kit with more than enough for one project.
C**R
Great product, easy to use, quick clean up!
Easy to use. Perfect for refilling picky pads! Will be buying again!
A**N
Works like a charm
Works goodI'm using it to make rat tales for crankbaitsAdd some micro powder...very stretchy and lots of movementWould recommend
J**N
Great product
Great for making your own mold, but not a lot of it (that was my fault for not ordering the larger bottles).
M**R
Stays sticky- Needs to come in different packaging! Prepared to be BS’d by this company
I wanted to replicate a mold that I already own. I wanted multiple copies of the same item so I can hopefully use them for candle making. I was definitely successful in creating a mold with this. The instructions were easy to follow. I filled my original mold with hot glue and made a bunch of copies of the cactus. I then built mold cavities. One out of legos from dollar tree and one from cookie cutters. I took contact paper and put it upside down and placed the mold walls on that and applied hot glue in order to hold it down and make sure there was no leakage. I measured on a scale part an and part b. There was a ton of bubbles and that made me really nervous! However in my finished product i barely saw any bubbles. I sat there and babysat this for at least a half hour blowing through a straw at any big bubbles I saw . I messed up on the bigger mold in my pics by not gluing down the items and instead trusting that dollar tree contact paper was strong enough to hold them down! A few of my cactuses floated to the surface and will now forever be entombed in silicone! I still got a few viable mold cavities.After the first half of the bottles were gone I decided to go ahead and try a second time. This time was a disaster! Once the bottle is half empty is is damn near impossible to get part B to come out of the bottle! The bottles are hard and don’t squeeze so you have to sit there waiting for it to slowly drip out! My scale turned off several times in the process which made things even more difficult! Part B should come in a tub or squeeze tube! Eventually I went into my garage and sawed off the top of the bottle so I could get a spatula in there and scrape it out! I even tried warming the bottles like you do with a baby bottle to get it to liquify more but that didn’t do much. It did help reduce some of the bubbles but it didn’t help part B move out of the bottle. I think possible storing the bottles upside down may help with getting the remaining few ounces out but I highly suggest they change the packaging somehow. Maybe put part b in a tub so that you can get it out easier. The more fussing you do with the stuff the more bubbles you introduce. The molds came out pretty good though and I even tried one with hot glue and it worked quite well. I would love to buy more and try more but not if they don’t somehow change the packaging. This is almost a waste because it’s so hard to get the remaining few ounces out of the bottle!UPDATE:I emailed let’s resin to ask them what I can do to get rid of the sticky residue that was left over on the top and bottom surface of the mold. At first they tried to insinuate I somehow didn’t measure and/or mix it properly and so I provided them with a video of me making my molds. Once they saw the video they then sent me an email telling me that it’s because I used “hot melt glue” as a master mold. They sent along part of their instructions where it does say that there could be potential curing issues with the “hot melt glue”. I don’t see how that is possible. The glue was fully cured and hardened for over 24 hours before I used it. In the instructions it says that the part that comes in contact with the “contaminate” may not cure properly. In my case, that is the ONLY part of the mold that actually cured properly! The mold functions properly. I’ve used it to cast already. It’s just the entire rest of the mold is tacky, causing hair and dust to stick to it.I would love one of their chemists to explain how cured hot glue will effect parts of the silicone mold that it didn’t even come in contact with such as the bottom, top and side surfaces of the mold! Sounds like a bunch of BS if you ask me and a company that just doesn’t want to take responsibility for perhaps a bad batch of silicone. I see other reviews here saying the same thing about the sticky residue and they did not use “hot melt glue” for their master mold. I mean right in the instructions that they sent to me and highlighted it says that the parts that come in contact with the substance that is supposedly a contaminate, is the part that wouldn’t cure right, so how is it that the rest of the mold is sticky? Makes no sense at all! They seem to be doing all they can to avoid having to replace items! I wasn’t even asking them for a replacement! I was just asking if there’s a way to get rid of the sticky residue! I emailed different resin company about an issue I had with their product and that time it was MY error and they replaced the bottles for me for free without me even asking! That’s a company that does right by their customers. This company is trying to avoid fault at all costs! Just be wary! If you ask questions they will do whatever they can to avoid blame and make it your fault, even if it doesn’t make sense!! As you can see in my photos, the casted part that actually came in contact with the cured “hot melt glue” came out perfectly fine. It is the entire rest of the mold that’s slightly tacky.