Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Gary Gifford wrote on Mon, Nov 20, 2006 05:44 PM UTC:To get a good mold line-up - do this, assume we are making a pawn mold for this example. 1) Have 2 slabs of soft Sculpy ready (for 2 mold halves). 2) Use some type of post (such as 4 nails) to act as line-up pins (Push these through bottom of mold slab) one at each corner 3) Add talcum powder to lower mold to minimize piece sticking. 4) Push pawn half-way into lower mold 5) put wax-paper around non-piece area of mold 6) add talcum powder to top of piece 7) press top slab down, then remove (you may need to practice with wax-paper and talcum powder)to prevent halves from sticking 8) Remove pawn and wax-paper. Leave the guide posts(nails) in place 9) bake mold halfs (apart) per sculpy instructions the nails and molds will be hot, so allow sufficient cool down. 10) Later: when you use the molds, apply talcum powder (light dusting) to both mold halves; then add the soft sculpy. The alignment nails should give you a good alignment. 11) when you remove the pawn, trim away flash and smooth out the mold-lines so they cannot be seen. 12) After all pawns are made-- heat them per instructions. Note: for large items I put aluminum foil at the center of the piece to a) minimize sculpy use and b) allow a better hardening In regard to photos - I have not taken any. Also note that I have mostly made characters from sculpy, also a dog, elf, strange guys, pumpkins, a cow, ghost.... I do have a box with a partial Sculpy chess set somewhere... perhaps lost in the garage. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID Molds does not match any item.