Karla M.
Comentado en México el 16 de julio de 2024
Es un muy buen material y lo he pedido en varias ocasiones, pero aumentaron demasiado su costo y está dejando de ser una opción para mis creaciones.
Sophie
Comentado en Australia el 15 de julio de 2024
No se pudo cargar el contenido.
Fernando Sámano
Comentado en México el 26 de abril de 2022
El producto es excelente, justo lo que necesitaba para mi negocio... lo malo es que justo después de mi compra subieron el precio casi al doble :( tendré que buscar otras opciones para después... :(
aram
Comentado en Arabia Saudita el 10 de junio de 2021
I got the white printable one it’s really nice
nael ante
Comentado en México el 4 de enero de 2020
es muy bueno para hacer manualidades si querés hacer pines este es tu papel
Morghie
Comentado en Canadá el 1 de mayo de 2019
This paper prints wonderfully and works so well for my intended purpose! I’ve been making little charms for Artist Alley and they are turning out so nicely.
♛ ZU.CINNI ♛
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 7 de febrero de 2017
I absolutely love this product alot! I use it to make cheap charms/ pins to sell at artist alley!At first I was weary of purchasing it because of mixed reviews but I love it!! I purchased the pack of 50 in white and from reading some of these reviews the 6 pack seems a bit defected in a way? i've seen more negative reviews about the pack of 6 then the pack of 50, but make sure to read the instructions!!!TIPS/TRICKS:- this is stated on the instructions: but remember to to change the opacity (50%) and enlarge the picture! it shrinks to half its size! like almost exactly half its size consistently.- print using glossy paper settings! before I would use the default plain paper setting but that only only creates unwanted streaks that will show up when its shrunk. (I have learned from my mistake)- waste a sheet! each oven is a bit different from the rest so waste a sheet to see which temperature works best! for me 325 Fahrenheit works the absolute best!- NOTE the higher the temperature the more likely it will distort in an awkward way.- DON'T leave it in for too long or else the colour will darken more! or turn a bit yellow/brown. from experience the longer I left one of them in the oven the more "burnt" it looked. its better to take it out 5 seconds after it un-shrinks itself and lays flat or somewhat flat.- keep a heavy book around to flatten it out more after taking it out.- glaze it or spray it for better protection!WHAT TO EXPECT!:- a noticeably rough texture after being shrunk.- there will be slight shape distorts. not every piece shrinks the same! but its not super noticable!- colours will darken after shrinking! and become thicker!
Jonas
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de septiembre de 2013
This is the worst shrink plastic I have ever used for a couple of reasons.It took a lot of work before we even could get decent quality prints from this plastic, first there's the problem with baking them in the oven, this plastic doesn't react to heat as other brands, it just doesn't stretch out and becomes flat by itself, like most other brands do, instead we had to push the plastic while it was either in the oven or when it was just out of the oven, we would have to do this every time to ensure the plastic was flat after being in the oven.The next thing would be that the paint & color on the plastic doesn't stick, after it had been in the oven and had shrunken you could wipe the plastic with some water and the paint/color would smudge off, like...a lot!The overall quality is also just bad, it's very grainy quality and I would only suggest that you print out simple shapes on this plastic, nothing too advance or it just won't look good.My advice when using this shrink plastic would be this, first decide on a simple shape or design to print out, make sure you print out with low amount of color (this is something you need to do with most shrink plastics that you print out), then place them in the oven for a while and use a spatula or something similar to press the shrink plastic to get it flat, only do a few shrink plastics at once so you can flatten them all out.After you shrunken and harden them it's best to remove excess paint, use a wet rag and remove the excess paint softly, after that add a thin layer of lacquer on top of the shrink plastic. This will give you a OK result, but you need to test and try different ways to get this shrink plastic to be OK.The shrink plastic is cheap and I guess that you get what you pay for, my final advice would be to stay away from this. It just caused so much work and trouble, and if the reasons above wasn't enough the shrink plastic sheets have even started to separate from each other, it looks like a thin layer of transparent plastic on top of the shrink plastic sheets.I would have returned this product if it wasn't that I live in Sweden and that I had to send it back to USA to return it.