I played with shrink plastic in the toaster oven last night to make some fun typographic pendants.
I used white shrink film sheets made by
Grafix, purchased at a local craft store. (Rumor has it that
Shrinky Dink brand plastic is a little better, especially if you plan to make larger items. It curls less. But Grafix worked just fine for this.)
How to make your own pendants:
Print out images to trace onto plastic. They should be 250% larger than the intended finished size. Download my ampersand and "hey" shapes
here, or make your own words or characters—try asterisks or names! I used Helvetica for the ampersand and
Pacifico (a free font) for "hey."
With a pencil, trace shapes onto the shrink film. If you're using glossy film and it's difficult to make pencil lines show up, roughen the surface of the plastic a bit with sandpaper first.
Cut out the holes in the shapes with an X-Acto knife and trim the outer edges with a scissors. Punch a hole at the top if desired; I used a 1/8" punch.
Erase any pencil lines from the edges or they'll be baked on.
Following the instructions on your film package, bake the pieces in a conventional oven or toaster oven. I laid my shapes on a piece of cardboard and stuck them in a 300 degree toaster oven. I watched them like a hawk, yanking them out and flattening them a bit if it looked like the edges were curling so much they might stick together. Then I put them back in the oven to finish baking. Don't be horrified by the crazy curling that happens; as long as the edges don't get stuck together, the shapes should flatten out by themselves. When they stop shrinking (2-3 minutes), pull them out and press them with a spatula or more cardboard while they're still hot to get them perfectly flat.
Add a jump ring and chain, and you're all set.
You have read this article fonts /
tutorials
with the title July 2012. You can bookmark this page URL https://jenkrebs.blogspot.com/2012/07/diy-shrink-plastic-typography-pendants.html. Thanks!