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The next member of the Worbla family is Worbla’s Pearly Art. Pearly Art is a sister product to Worbla’s Black Art, with the smoothest finish available in Worbla products, a white color to make marking designs easier, and a stronger adhesive to make joining pieces simpler. Pearly Art is excellent for projects with minimal priming for a smooth finish, fine sculptural details, and frosted light effects.
Worbla’s Pearly Art is non-toxic and skin safe and can be shaped by hand without requiring special safety gear. Pearly Art can take complex curves without requiring a vacuform, and is self-adhesive when activated – meaning that glues are not required to join pieces. You use hot air, water or steam to shape the plastic however you want. There’s no waste because your scraps can be conditioned and 100% re-blended. These leftovers can be molded to act just like putty, and many artists use Worbla’s Art products instead of clay to create near-indestructible pieces.
Pearly Art activates between 80-90 °C / 175-195 °F.
If you have never seen Worbla handled or tried it yourself, customers often compare it to clay, fruit leather or beeswax when heated: becoming pliable and taking detail well, becoming hard and stable when cool. Pearly Art can be built up in layers, shaped over forms of foam, foil, wire or similar armatures, and can be used as a single layer.
Like many Worbla products, Pearly Art can be painted with just about any paint, wax or finish. Pearly Art has a very fine and smooth texture when worked and you may choose to leave it unprimed before painting it, or prime it with products such as Flexbond, Gesso, or PVA glue.
Here are some examples of Pearly Art in action!
Team Paraluna did a comparison of the new Pearly Art against Finest Art and Black Art, and shared their favorite parts of each material here and here!
Syrupcookie used Pearly Art for the creation of her amazing Necromancer costume, photographed by A.Z.Production Cosplay Photography and Tobias Schmelzer
Lady Arthas Cosplay created her Sindragosa build using Black Art, Pearly Art, TranspArt, Deco Art, and led lights. Images by Anthony Curley Photography and Acoustica Photography
Of course, sometimes it’s best to see a product in action. We have some great videos folks have shared with us using Pearly Art below!