I have a butt-load of errands to turn today.
First up, deliver a box of doo-doo to the UPS store.
Unprovoked by me, my health insurance provider shipped me a colon cancer test. I did one of these a few years ago after my yearly physical during which the doc said, "It's time for you to have a colonoscopy," and I said, "Not gonna do it." He ordered a doo-it-yourself kit, which must have put me on somebody's radar to schedule another one down the road. In any case, I "dood" the deed this morning, and now I've got to deliver the box to the UPS store. I hate walking in there with a box of poop, knowing the UPS counter person will realize what's in the box. Less embarrassing than making our regular UPS guy drive around with it in the back of his truck all day.
Tomorrow, I must have a tooth pulled, first thing in the morning. I am not expecting to be in a lot of pain afterward, but it wouldn't hurt to lay in some easy-to-grab grub for the natives in case I don't feel like cooking for a couple of days. Or a week. ;)
I might go to the hobby store while I'm out. A few weeks ago, I dissed some cheap polymer clay that I bought from the hobby store, claiming it was too soft and gooey to work with. I also dissed some cheap polymer clay that I bought from Walmart, claiming it was too hard and crumbly. Since then, I've discovered that the two clays combine fairly well to come up with a clay that is manageable, so I might get more.
Lately I have been interested in making my own molds for use with clay. Last week, I rolled out some clay about 1/4" thick, carved some designs into it, and baked it. After the mold cooled, I misted it with water and pressed raw clay into it. The clay came out of the mold fairly easily, but because the mold was pretty thick and not very bendable, I had to pull on the clay, which distorted the imprint a little. I wondered if I could make a rubbery mold of the baked mold. There's a can of rubbery dipping stuff in the craft cabinet, but I've never even opened it and don't know how it behaves. Yesterday, I ran across a video in which a woman was mixing 100% silicone with cornstarch to make molds. She kneaded it like dough. That afternoon, I went to the hardware store and bought a tube of silicon and a caulk gun, but I haven't tried it yet. This morning, I watched a guy squirting silicone into soapy water to make his mold. He squirted a little silicone into the water, gathered it up in his fingers, kneaded it, and pressed a thin layer onto the thing he was molding. He said he would add another coat after the first one dried a little
I'm not familiar with silicone, but I don't understand why I can just smear straight silicone into my baked mold and be done. Maybe the soap is what makes it bendable? I'll have to research this before I cut that tube open.
Yesterday, the mailman delivered a bunch of craft stuff from Temu. It's been so long since I ordered the stuff that I'd forgotten about it. I peeked into the bags but have not had a chance to really see what's in them. I'll save that for tomorrow after the dental torture session, when I'll need a good distraction.