1 review for SINGLES Tim Holtz Adirondack Alcohol Inks .5 oz
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Description
Available in individual bottles of over 80 coordinating colors.
Alcohol Blending Solution is available for lightening colors adding detail and cleaning inks from non-porous surfaces.
Use the Adirondack® Alcohol Ink Applicator to apply Alcohol Inks to paper and other surfaces. Refill available. Use the Adirondack® Alcohol Ink Fillable Pen to create custom Alcohol Ink markers for doodling, journaling and coloring.
Create your own color chart
TIM HOLTZ® ADIRONDACK® ALCOHOL INKS
Acid free
Fade Resistant, Dye Inks
Multi-Surface Inks. Use on glossy paper, dominoes, metal, shrink plastic, glass, and other slick surfaces.
.5 fl. oz. Bottles
Precision Tips
Coordinating Colors
Note: Ranger does not recommend using Adirondack Alcohol Inks, Metallic Mixatives, Snow Cap Mixative or Alcohol Ink Blending Solution in spray bottles as these contents contain alcohol and should not be airborne.
Read what Ginger from The Blue Bottle Tree has to say about colouring translucent clay with her favourite alcohol inks.
Additional information
Weight | N/A |
---|---|
Dimensions | 7.5 × 2.5 × 2.5 cm |
Colour | Amethyst, Aqua, Aquamarine, Botanical, Bottle, Boysenberry, Butterscotch, Caramel, Citrus, Cloudy Blue, Clover, Cobalt, Cool Peri, Cranberry, Crimson, Currant, Denim, Dijon, Eggplant, Ember, Espresso, Everglades, Fiesta, Ginger, Glacier, Gumball, Honeycomb, Indigo, Laguna, Latte, Lemonade, Lettuce, Meadow, Mermaid, Mojito, Monsoon, Moss, Mushroom, Oregano, Patina, Peach Bellini, Pebble, Pink Sherbet, Pistachio, Pitch Black, Pool, Poppy Field, Purple Twilight, Raspberry, Red Pepper, Rosewood, Rust, Sail Boat Blue, Salmon, Sandal, Shell Pink, Sienna, Slate, Stone Washed, Stream, Sunset Orange, Sunshine Yellow, Teakwood, Terra Cotta, Turquoise, Vineyard, Watermelon, Wild Plum, Willow, Coral, Dandelion, Flamingo, Limeade, Sepia, Valencia |
Tiffany Brown (verified owner) –
These alcohol inks give a beautiful pigment. I used them to colour my white polymer clay and they gave beautiful pastel colours as I was hoping they would. The one alcohol ink in the colour Teakwood I was expecting to be a brown colour, but when mixed in with my clay it was a very earthy yellow-green kind of colour. However, I did read somewhere that it’s hard to tell what your alcohol ink might look like when mixed with clay. So that was no problem, a little red and blue mixed in to the clay and it’s now a lovely light milk chocolate brown. They all worked out quite well and baked in the clay beautifully.