

🎨 Craft your legacy with every stamp — precision meets passion!
This 20x30cm photopolymer plate offers a water-soluble, UV-curable resin solution for DIY stamp making. Trusted by flexographic printers and artists alike, it enables easy, chemical-free creation of durable, high-detail printing plates at home using affordable UV light equipment. Ideal for creative professionals seeking precision and eco-conscious crafting.
| Best Sellers Rank | #323,336 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ( See Top 100 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ) #53 in Scrapbooking Texture Plates |
| Customer Reviews | 3.4 out of 5 stars 38 Reviews |
S**Y
Used For Hot Stamping Plates
I've tried so many different methods for making my own hot foil stamping plates. Acid etch on copper, carved silicone, etc. Either it was too time extensive, didn't work well or too soft of a material. I learned about using photopolymer for uv transferring images from printed negatives and amazingly, it worked perfectly. Just print a negative on a transparency, use a cheap $20 uv nail drying machine to flash cure it, then a toothbrush in a tupperware container filled with water to scrub out all the unexposed photopolymer. Throw it back into the uv light to solidify the cure and you have a nice, hard photo etched plate. Tape it to your heat press with double sided tape, doesn't have to be heat resistant, just the basic scotch tape. At 300 degrees, the plate heats up enough and still stays firm to stamp foil with. I am so glad this worked. I have so many ideas I can finally bring to life now. Edit: After you cure it, it's best to press it between two hard surfaces, like some books to keep it flat when not in use. That way it doesn't warp and stays nice and firm. It's been about 5 months now since I've been using this and I feel like I've pretty much mastered it now. I still use the first stamps I've made and they press with hot foil just as nicely as the first time. It just takes practice to flash a nice negative so your plate comes out crisp.
D**O
pre-exposed light contaminated
Not protected from light exposure. Would not wash out even if we did not expose it. We do photo emulsion screens every day. Totally unusable. One star was the lowest choice.
J**D
Pre exposed already
no instructions at all. Did get them to work the trick is very warm water with a very soft toothbrush and lots of scrubbing.
I**R
Might work, not your best choice.
I was able to get parts of the sheet to work, so if your just doing small items it is possible. The overall problem is these plates are UV light sensitive of course and are best stored in a black plastic bag. These are not stored in anything. Mine came in an Amazon bag, no further protection. There is a semi-UV proof clear cover on them but that doesn't stop UV light coming in the edges. Who knows how they are stored in the warehouse or for how long. The end result is parts of the plate seem pre-exposed (not good) and the wash-out step takes a really long time if it is successful at all. By comparison my plates from Boxcar Press wash-out super easy.
O**Q
Wasted my time
I ordered this Photopolymer to make my own stamps but this was extremely hard and not useful for making any kind of stamp. In description they've written it can be used to make stamp but it's not working at all
S**L
Waste of money - doesn't work
Tried several ways to develop the plate and nothing worked. Plate does not develop. Total waste of money
M**R
It warped and made a messy print
After I exposed my film into the plate, I left it for 2 days. When I came back, it was warped/ didn’t lay flat. Also, when I inked the plate to press a print, it rubbed out messy and therefore made a messy print. I was under a deadline so I continued using it. Lining up my paper and plate on my register, I wasn’t able to clearly print where I wanted because of the warp. I would recommend using metal plates for intaglio. I DON’T RECOMMEND.
G**Y
Didnt work for me
It appears that this material has already been exposed. Could not get the non exposed portion to clean up. So i cut another piece from the sheet, and just tried to clean up the whole piece…did not work. Another question…why would photo sensitive materal come packaged in clear plastic?
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago