Slime Mâché
Having done a deep dive into the process of my slime mache making here, I wanted to analyse the results from the composite testing I did with cornstarch and rice flour pastes (slimes). To gain a broad and quick understanding of how the glues worked in collaboration with paper and other additives to help create potentially biodegradable materials to cast and sculpt with by hand.
What I love about working with some of these materials was the hand feel and the ease with which they could be sculpted. This feels an important part of a soothing / de stressing practice for me, and it’s interesting that through the experiments I was reminded of ASMR and the soothing feeling many people gain from tactile things such as slime. I wander why this is and how I translate this from my own making to how my objects are experienced.
Slime from ASMR youtube video compilation ( uncredited)
Others proved a lot messier and created brittle, sometimes smelly (!) materials when lavender preservatives weren’t used - perhaps the opposite of soothing. There is fine line between creating materials that are stable and fit for purpose versus being easily recycled or compostable. I was interested to learn that plaster is actually a useful addition to compost and begins to offer a more hardy base when casting, and so my next experiments in this area will lie in this direction. I began introducing it in combination with the slime mache with some success.
Below is the full pallet and I’ll then include some larger shapes I went on to make from the more successful iterations. All were dehydrated in the at 65 degrees celsius over night.