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Thread: Stamp Making Material Source

  1. #1

    Stamp Making Material Source

    Hi guys

    What do I need to make and use rubber stamps, and where's a good place to buy. Gonna make some rubber stamp sets for my friends' kids as a little Christmas present. Thanks

    Dave
    Epilog 35 W 12x24
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  2. #2
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    David,

    Do a search on here for Millenium Marking Co......I got a free sample from them and it worked GREAT!
    Epilog Mini 24 - 45 Watt, Corel Draw X5, Wacom Intuos Tablet, Unengraved HP Laptop, with many more toys to come.....





    If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have one idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas... George B. Shaw

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Clarkson View Post
    David,

    Do a search on here for Millenium Marking Co......I got a free sample from them and it worked GREAT!
    Is the "no-odor polymer" really "no-odor"?
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  4. #4
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    Yes it is.....actually, both are pretty tame.
    Epilog Mini 24 - 45 Watt, Corel Draw X5, Wacom Intuos Tablet, Unengraved HP Laptop, with many more toys to come.....





    If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have one idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas... George B. Shaw

  5. #5
    I make stamps for a living - All of the rubber stinks

    You can get everything you need (rubber, wood mount, acrylic mount)

    Google search "Jackson Marking Products"

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
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    I make all my own stamp polymer sheets for use in the laser.. There is a smell, but nothing like the three week rotten dead skunk odour you get from rubber.. I asked for a sample of that low/no odour rubber, and they send me a sheet of 'something' that didn't look any different than the normal stinky stuff, so I never got around to trying it.. The polymer vaporizes and leaves a oily residue that washes clean away with water..
    Epilog 24TT(somewhere between 35-45 watts), CorelX4, Photograv(the old one, it works!), HotStamping, Pantograph, Vulcanizer, PolymerPlatemaker, Sandblasting Cabinet, and a 30 year collection of Assorted 'Junque'

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  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Marquette, Michigan USA
    Posts
    42
    90% of my laser work is making rubber stamps. The "no odor" rubber from Millennium Marking is almost odor free. It looks the same as the other stuff, but I can finally run stamps without smelling it for three days, and that's with good exhaust! The next door bike shop hasn't threatened to do me in since I started using it. The only negative is that it is more sensitive to heat and will lose detail on extremely fine lines when doing a deeper etch. I still need to use El-Stinko occasionally, but I try to avoid if at all possible.

    Well worth trying!

    Art Anderson

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
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    Try the polymer.. They call it laser polymer, but it's the same stuff used for making UV exposed polymer stamps.. It has a bit of a sweet smell (no relation to the dead skunk rubber), and fine lines are no problem.. I only use 'rubber' if the stamp is being used with acid, solvent, or oil based inks. Polymer is fine for 99% of the stamps I make. My normal production runs is on a photopolymer plate maker, and I use the laser when I need a few quicker. If your making 50 a day, a laser is far too slow, and UV Polymer is the way to go. If your making a 100 or more of the same stamp, or a group of stamps, (like art stamps to be repeated) then vulcanized rubber is the way to go..
    Last edited by Bill Cunningham; 10-24-2009 at 10:02 PM.
    Epilog 24TT(somewhere between 35-45 watts), CorelX4, Photograv(the old one, it works!), HotStamping, Pantograph, Vulcanizer, PolymerPlatemaker, Sandblasting Cabinet, and a 30 year collection of Assorted 'Junque'

    Every time you make a typo, the errorists win

    I Have to think outside the box.. I don't fit in it anymore


    Experience is a wonderful thing.
    It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.


    Every silver lining has a cloud around it




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