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Thursday 6 October 2016

How to Cut Dense Media - Shrink Plastic

Shrink Plastic Shrinky Dinks tutorial by Nadine Muir for Silhouette UK Blog

Hello Nadine here with a tutorial to show you a technique that can help with cutting very dense or hard media.

If you've not played with shrink plastic before, it's really fun.  You start with a sheet of plastic that looks like regular acetate, draw and cut out your shape and then pop it in the oven.  Then the magic happens, it shrinks to 7 times smaller, yet 7 times thicker!

Here is a before and after comparison of a design I made into little earrings:

Before and After comparion.  Shrink Plastic Shrinky Dinks tutorial by Nadine Muir for Silhouette UK Blog


It is marketted for kids, but it has some lovely applications for grown ups too - such as the pretty swallow necklace and earrings I made with the help of my Cameo.  Other uses include keyrings, bespoke buttons, sun catchers and christmas decorations.

Cutting Challenge

The problem with Shrink Plastic is that it is incredibly dense and difficult to cut.  Indeed, many bloggers use it as the litmus test for cutting machines.  I've used the learnings from my blade tutorial, along with a pretty cool Marquetry video from Brian at Graphtec to manage it though :)

The brand I used is called Shrinkles, it's like Shrinky Dinks but more readily available in the UK.  Silhouette have their own brand coming very soon and I'm bursting to try it!  As soon as I can get my mits on it, I'll be back with a blog post and comparison!

What you’ll need: 

  • Silhouette CAMEO
  • Design of your choice
  • Shrink Plastic
  • Optional
    • Pen Holder and permanent pens such as Sharpies
    • Stamps

STEP ONE: Scale your Design

As your shape will become smaller and thicker, you need to compensate and make your design larger.

The shrinkage by 7 times actually refers to the area, so this equates roughly to a third smaller by width and height.  I find the easiest way to scale your shape is to make it the size you want after it's shrunk and then scale to 264.5% as below:


Top tip
You won't be able to make holes once it's shrunk, so make sure to add scaled up ones before you cut.

STEP TWO: Draw or Stamp

You can decorate the Shrink Plastic with colouring pencils, stamps or permanent markers.  Of course you can decorate freehand, but I used the Silhouette pen holder with a silver metallic marker to write text and sketch some designs onto the plastic.  There is a gloss and rough side of the plastic - you need to draw on the rough side.

Top tip
You need to draw on the rough side, but if you right-click and select 'Flip Horizontally', you'll find your pen will show up more clearly on the gloss side.  Illustrated in the photo below: the left-hand star had the text flipped and is glossy side up, whereas the right-hand star, I did not mirror the text and it is rough side up.

"Sketch pens show up on gloss side of  Shrink Plastic so mirror design.  Shrinky Dinks tutorial by Nadine Muir for Silhouette UK Blog"

STEP THREE: Using Brian's Marquetry approach

I watched a review in which the person tried to cut Shrink Plastic with a deep cut blade exposed to the maximum setting.  This is a mistake!  Let's refer back to my blade tutorial and our number one rule - use as little blade as possible.  The plastic isn't thick like craft foam, so it doesn't need a deep cut blade.  Instead, it's dense and the blade can't cut through the media in a single pass.

The trick is an approach that Brian uses when making marquetry with the Curio - we do lots of passes, gradually increasing the blade setting as it penetrates deeper and deeper, finally cutting all the way through.
Top tip
Don't unload the mat between passes, this will ensure that the cut will be in the identical position.
  • Start with the blade at 0, full pressure (thickness 33), speed 5 and double cut.
  • Blow away any dust from the blade and set to 1
  • Send to with cut blade at 1, full pressure (thickness 33), speed 5 and double cut.
  • Set blade to 2 and repeat
  • Set blade to 3 and repeat twice
  • Set blade to 4 and repeat twice more
At this point your shape should be fully and cleanly cut.  If not, just keep going - softly, softly catchy monkey!

Cameo 3 Tricks

One of the things that sold the Cameo 3 to me was the automatic blade.  Instead of setting the blade manually, the Cameo 'punches' this special blade to the setting that you specify.  Not only is this handy and saves time, it means you are less likely to knock and damage the blade.

I duplicated the shape several times in the same position, giving each copy a different line colour.  Then, in the advanced cut settings, by line colour, I applied the user defined settings I created for shrink plastic (autoblade, thickness 33, speed 5, blade varying from 1 to 4).  This allowed for the whole process to be automated.
 
Top tip
Even if you don't use the auto-blade or the advanced cut settings, the Cameo 3 has a simple but really handy 'Repeat Job' function once a job is finished - I love it and use it lots when making lots of replicated designs.

STEP FOUR: SHRINK

Here is the shrink plastic before it went in the oven:

I baked at 175 degrees centigrade for a few minutes. You can also use a heat gun if you'd rather.

It will distort and curl up in an alarming fashion, but don't worry, it'll right itself and lie flat, indicating that it's done. Remove from the head and allow to cool.

Here are the shapes now they have shrunk:


FINISHED PRODUCT

I slotted a small jump ring through one of the feather holes on the swallow's wing and then threaded a silver chain.

I found it quite hard to photograph, as it glows in a very pretty way when the light passes through, but trust me, it 's really charming in real life.





DESIGNS USED: 

Nic Squirrell Swallow #81761

PRODUCTS USED:
Light hold cutting mat for Cameo

5 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your cutting technique with this material Nadine. I'd seen a review that said it wasn't possible to cut shrink plastic with the Cameo, but felt that there must be a way!

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  2. Really fascinating Nadine. I love your Maths acumen too!

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  3. This is a great tutorial. It is often frustrating to see people on the internet make claims about the Silhouette machines based on their obvious lack of knowledge on how to use the machine correctly. So it is is very refreshing to see a post like this where the user clearly 'gets it' and knows how to use the machine well. Well done, Nadine, I'm really happy to see someone has taken my marquetry technique and used it to cut materials that others would consider impossible.

    - Brian @ Graphtec GB

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  4. Great idea Nadine - I would like to try this with my Curio - it doesn't have the advantage of the auto blade of course but the bonus of being able to unload the base to inspect the cut!Would you recommend slightly less pressure with the Curio though?

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  5. Great tutorial Nadine. I haven't used shrink plastic for years but I think I have some somewhere I must look it out. Thank you for the tut

    ReplyDelete