Dextrin is any starch (corn, potato, complex polysacharrides) that has been roasted until approximately golden brown (sometimes in the presence of acids). It's used as a binder in pyrotechnic formulations, as an adhesive paste (wallpaper), fabric sizing, as an adjunct in brewing, or GRAVY! Place Argo corn starch and spread it out in a think layer on a cookie sheet and bake in the oven at ~400 deg. F for several hours, mixing occasionally, until a golden brown. But, frankly, I don't think you need to go to this much trouble.. just make cooked corn starch paste as outlined below. You can also buy various dextrins at brewing supply houses. YMMV. As a suggestion for keeping the paper from drying in a wrinkled fashion, pre-shrink the paper as a watercolor artist does prior to using watercolor paper by first soaking it in water, then taping it to MDF with 2" wide gummed paper tape, then maybe add your dextrin mixture with a spray bottle set on fine mist. see this link for how to pre-stretch watercolor paper: http://painting.about.com/library/blwcpaper.htm Yes, the starch that is in fabric starch is the same as the argo cornstarch that is used in food - I contacted Argo. I starch my own shirts and cannot get laundry starch (the ole-timey kind that you cook) at the groc. store anymore, so I use food grade cornstarch (basically passes through a finer mesh). My mixture, which would probably serve well as a starch for TT is as follows: Bring 2 cups of water to a boil. stir 1/2 cup of cornstarch into 1/2 cup of COLD WATER until smooth. stir this cold mixture into the boiling water ... stirring constantly. Cook until the starch thickens. If you need a thicker mixture, just make up a little more COLD starch/water mixture to add to the boiling mixture. If you try to stir cornstarch straight into hot water, you'll never get it smooth... it makes lumps: always add to cold water then the mix to hot water. Also, the spray starch that you get in the cans is NOT what you're looking for... it relys on the heat of the iron to "thicken" the mix while ironing. If you just spray it on paper it will still just be little grainy bits of starch. Use the cooked method above for a transluscent paste (of variable viscosity depending on starch/water ratio) that will suit your needs very well. The overspray has clear-coated the walls in my apartment where I iron my shirts - exactly what you guys are looking for. Just some thoughts from someone who uses a helluva lotta cornstarch. Gardner __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Search - Find what you\ufffdre looking for faster http://search.yahoo.com
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Dextrin
2004-03-12 by Gardner
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