[intro music] Hi! Welcome to Make Thrift Buy, a show where you guys send clothes from the internet and I try to recreate them. Today’s challenge was sent in by Jenny Pepper, who suggested these melting tights from URB Clothing, which are handmade, latex, and retail from $55 to $80. Now these tights are by an awesome handmade designer, and if you can afford to you should totally go and support them, but if you’re anything like me and there’s no way you can spend $55 dollars on a pair of tights, well…Maybe we can make these for ourselves. So let’s give it a go! So I started out with a pair of sheer tights that match my skin colour, and this three-dimensional fabric paint that I found on Ebay. [Annotation: You can get single bottles for cheaper – see the links in the video description] As soon as I saw that there was glittery paint I had to have that one, but there are non-glittery types if that’s not your thing. I also got myself a large piece of cardboard which I rolled up into the approximate width of my leg, and I stretched one leg of the stockings on over the cardboard, and I started painting. I basically just did these long drips down the length of the tights in what I thought what looked like a melting style. And then using a paint brush I try to blend the paint at the top of the tights because, well that’s what the ones URB Clothing looked like and I’m trying to re-create them. With one leg done I set this outside in the sunshine to dry for a few hours. Then it was simply a matter of removing the tights from the— Wait… Oh…it’s stuck. It’s totally stuck. So the cardboard and the tights have dried together and now they won’t come apart! About an hour later I finally manage to release the tights from the cardboard, but unfortunately a lot of the cardboard came with it, and I almost gave up at this point when I discovered that scrubbing off cardboard with a wet cloth seemed to do the trick. So I saved them and I was back on track! For the second leg, I was smarter, and this time I put two coat hangers together like this. This insured that the tights would be stretched, and that also that the opposite sides wouldn’t stick to each other. For this leg I took it outside, clipped it onto my washing line so I wouldn’t get paint everywhere, and then I did the same technique dripping paint technique as before. Except that I didn’t blend the paint at the top this time, and again I let the tights dry for a couple of hours. So this time they easily came off the clothes hanger, but it was at this point I realized...mmm…this was probably not such a good colour for dripping tights. It looks like blood, anddd I don’t think that having blood dripping down your legs when you’re a girl is never really going to be a look that’s in vogue. Also another massive fail was where I tried to blend in the paint at the top of the tights. This stopped the tights from having ANY kind of stretch to them. So I couldn’t actually get this leg onto my own leg. I’m just going to go quietly into the cupboard of my…other…failed DIY projects. SO with my new knowledge of what worked and what doesn’t work I tried it out again on a fresh pair of tights using some lilac paint this time, and the coat hanger method. I slipped the tights onto my coat hangers, one leg at a time, painted in this dripping kind of fashion, and I let them dry overnight, and this time? It worked! Well, okay kind of. I mean…they don’t look anywhere near as good as the ones from URB Clothing, but I mean they’re really not that bad, and because I stuffed up so many times the price tag was getting towards the original price of the tights, but if you didn’t stuff up as much as me, and you bought three-dimensional fabric paint in single bottles then you could feasibly make this from the $10 dollars and it would be totally worth it. So, my conclusion? [scissor snipping sound effect] Heck yeah you can make these yourself! They’re not going to be as cool as the ones from URB Clothing, but I still think that they’re pretty effective. So make sure to give this video a thumbs up, subscribe to my channel because that really helps me out. Happy Crafting and if you have any more suggestions for clothes that you see on the internet that you’d like me to try out the just let me know by leaving me a comment below, and I’ll see you all next time!