Hey! New to the forums here, hope someone can help me.
I'm building a FCG and have just taken my white cheesecloth and soaked it in a bluing agent (Mrs. Stewarts) as some sites have instructed. I soaked for about 20 minutes, dried it overnight, and dried further in the dryer earlier today.
I wanted to test how bright it was under the blacklight, but it was barely noticeable! Nothing compared to the white t-shirt I was wearing. Is there something else I should have done? I know some sites said to just wash the cheesecloth in normal clothes detergent. Would that work better?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks!
Thread: Help! My FCG doesn't glow!
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Help! My FCG doesn't glow! –
10-08-2008,04:12 PM
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Ghost
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
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- 7
10-08-2008,04:20 PM
I had the same problem with laundry detergent. I then tried RIT whitener and am very pleased with the glow.
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10-08-2008,04:23 PM
Is the material 100% cotton? Cotton works best.
Regular laundry detergents work fine since bluing is already in them (I soak mine in a bucket of warm water and detergent overnight then rinse it but not too much) . Rit makes a fabric whitener that does the same thing and works very well.
I have also gutted highlighter type markers and soaked the guts in warm water overnight to extract the florescent dye. You can then soak the cheesecloth or put it in a spray bottle to highlight specific areas.
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- Join Date
- Sep 2008
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- Orangeville, Ontario, Canada
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10-08-2008,10:44 PM
TIDE Laundry detergent works best, or it did for me anyway. I also agree with rinsing lightly. I dressed my FCG in Cheesecloth. Another important thing, are you using incandescent blacklights or flourescent? or LED's. Ithas been shown that the "light bulb" black lights throw off very little of the UV spectrum. Another thing i did was purchased a small set of UV paints for my Ghost and i would think you could spray your FCG with these paints to help him glow better. There are also cans of spray UV paints available at places like Michaels etc. Best of luck, hope this helps......'Scruff
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10-09-2008,05:05 AM
I've used clamp-on reflectors with CFL blacklight bulbs (compact florescent) with great success. I also have two UV LED spots with the same reflectors that work up to 30 feet away.
For a more permanent solution on the glowing side, I'm going to try the transparent spray that these guys sell:
Clearneon Invisible Black light Paint, blacklight posters, glow in the dark, blacklight fixtures and bulbs, special effects, lighting, uv
It is supposed to be a true bright white when it gets hit by UV, not the normal blue color. I want to try it on some skeletons to make them stand out.
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10-09-2008,06:29 AM
I soaked the cloth in Downy fabric softner with 'bluing'. Worked like a charm....
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10-09-2008,07:18 AM
I got some generic Woolight and it worked really well.
I would suggest if you've already built your ghost to get a spray bottle and fill with a half water/half detergent mix and spray the ghost down.I'm a Halloween Bride! 10/31/2002
Where there is no imagination there is no horror.
~Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
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10-09-2008,08:46 AM
Another question, foolish or not...
What kind of blacklight are you using?
If you're using those "blacklight" light bulbs, that look like ordinary incandescent bulbs, but are a deep dark purple, you may find that those are just this side of worthless for a black light effect.
Otherwise, if you're using florescent bulbs (either the long straight ones in a fixture, or the CFL type), or if you're using UV LED lights, then I'd start worrying about the ghost.
As for the cheesecloth - what kind of fabric is it?
If it's any kind of synthetic material, it's not going to soak up any of the bluing agent.
A lot of gauzy fabrics are now made of nylon and other synthetics - it keeps them very light, and for regular purposes, it helps keep them from being stained. Sadly, it means everything just falls right off of them.Hell is an eternity of getting up at 4am to nothing but decaf coffee...
2009 photos and 2008 photos ...uhmmm...and what I have evolving...
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10-09-2008,02:55 PM
Thanks for all the suggestions.
To answer a few of the comments, I am using a flourescent blacklight that works great - no problem there. And the cheesecloth is 100% cotton.
Cloth is soaking now in RIT whitener. I'm sure that will do the trick.



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