🎨 Mold Your Imagination with Every Pour!
This large 12-inch plastic koi fish mold is designed for versatility, allowing you to create stunning desserts, chocolates, soaps, and more. Made from durable plastic, it measures 14” x 7” and is lightweight at just 0.02 pounds, making it easy to handle and reuse for all your creative projects.
Material Type | Plastic |
Item Weight | 0.02 Pounds |
Item Dimensions | 6.5 x 2.5 x 13.5 inches |
Color | Clear |
L**E
fish mold
easy to store & use
A**N
Nice detail on the mold
The mold made a well-detailed gelatin koi. It released easily. My only complaint is that the mold has no lid so it had to be held upright until the gelatin began to set. Fortunately, I was able to use a rectangular cake pan to hold it but it took some careful balancing to keep it upright.
C**O
Good mold.
This is a beautiful mold. Not heavy but the shape and detail are very good.
…**…
Terrible
Flimsy plastic, would not use as a food mold. Hot Liquids like jello especially, would melt the plastic. There’s no stand, so you cannot set it down by itself.
C**H
Spend a little bit more money and get the aluminum mold
Well so far I have made nine of these and every single one the tail has broken off when removed from the mold. I am quite experienced in concrete mold making, the problem is the mold itself. Much too thin where the body transitions into the tail. Spend a little bit more money and buy yourself the aluminum mold oh, I think it's much better made
D**E
Awesome.
My wife made a shrimp mold in this thing and it turned out awesome. It was a big hit at the party. Looked just like a big carp!
A**A
Very good for jelly desserts.
Great quality and good details. It's exactly what I was looking for.
S**S
This is NOT the best quality mold for cement casting
I bought this fish mold to make cement fish castings. I have used it about 10 times. The side fins & tail keep breaking on the fish when I take it out of the mold.I have used several types of mold release & I have put extra wire support inside of the fins. The same thing happens every time. Out of the 10 castings that I did - I ONLY GOT 2 FISH THAT KEPT THEIR FINS.I have been using a 50/50 mix of cement & sand.I think I'm going to try it with 100% cement to see if it helps. I'll even let it cure for a week before removing it from the mold.Its a nice fish - but for the purpose of cement casting - I would NOT recommend.THE FINS ARE JUST TOO SENSITIVE TO BREAKAGE. ITS MOST LIKELY DUE TO THE THICKNESS OF THE FINS IN THE MOLD. IF THEY WERE THICKER IT WOULD PROBABLY HELP
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2 weeks ago
3 days ago