New formula for Retrobright
Posted: 21 Jul 2015, 19:28
Today I tried a new formula for retrobright. The goal is to reduce cost as much as possible and make it easy to source everywhere as I understand that high vol. peroxide is not easy to find in all countries.
PLEASE don't make this a "yellow comes back"/"it won't last" thread. We all know the limits of retrobright.
If you don't like foreplay go to the TL;DR at the end of the page.
Here's how I found the new formula.
The other day I saw an ad about some hair beauty products and I remembered that to stain hairs of a lighter color you actually need to bleach them first. The bleaching products already come in a cream that is nothing more than gellified Hydrogen peroxide. The strongest I could find is 40 Vol (12%) which is quite good for retrobrighting.
I looked for beauty saloon products and found 1 liter of bleaching cream for around €2 euros (!!!). Don't buy products for "home" use by Wella or BBlonde, they are insanely expensive.
My first try was a complete disaster. I put the cream directly over the yellowed plastic and wrapped it with a transparent plastic peel (the one you use in your kitchen) to prevent the cream to dry too quickly. The result was a zebra-like piece of plastic. Some areas were super white, others yellow with all the gradients in between. Bummer.
Second try a success! I took 4 parts of bleaching cream, 1 part water, 0.5 part oxy put into a spray bottle, stirred and sprayed over the plastic. Exposed to direct sun light and every approx 30 minutes I sprayed again the solution. The result was overwhelming! After just 2 hours the plastic was as clean and white as new. I couldn't really believe my eyes.
So to sum up
TL;DR
- buy 40 vol hair bleaching product. Buy beauty saloon products not products for "home" use. I can easily find them on ebay, I paid just €2 for one liter
- mix: 4 parts of bleaching product, 1 part water, 0.5 parts oxy/vanish (the gelly/liquid version is easier to mix). You really don't need much product. To bleach the mouse you see below I probably needed 100ml product total
- put everything in a spray bottle and spray over the plastic
- expose to UV light (artificial is actually better than sun!!)
- spray again every 30 minutes or before it completely dried out
- in my experience after just 2-3 hours you are good to go. YMMV
Unfortunately I don't have the before picture, but believe me: it was incredibly yellow.
Now it's like this:

IMPORTANT: it's not a miracle formula, many things could go wrong. You may very well end up ruining your precious retro junk! Don't do it if you don't understand the risk!
PLEASE don't make this a "yellow comes back"/"it won't last" thread. We all know the limits of retrobright.
If you don't like foreplay go to the TL;DR at the end of the page.
Here's how I found the new formula.
The other day I saw an ad about some hair beauty products and I remembered that to stain hairs of a lighter color you actually need to bleach them first. The bleaching products already come in a cream that is nothing more than gellified Hydrogen peroxide. The strongest I could find is 40 Vol (12%) which is quite good for retrobrighting.
I looked for beauty saloon products and found 1 liter of bleaching cream for around €2 euros (!!!). Don't buy products for "home" use by Wella or BBlonde, they are insanely expensive.
My first try was a complete disaster. I put the cream directly over the yellowed plastic and wrapped it with a transparent plastic peel (the one you use in your kitchen) to prevent the cream to dry too quickly. The result was a zebra-like piece of plastic. Some areas were super white, others yellow with all the gradients in between. Bummer.
Second try a success! I took 4 parts of bleaching cream, 1 part water, 0.5 part oxy put into a spray bottle, stirred and sprayed over the plastic. Exposed to direct sun light and every approx 30 minutes I sprayed again the solution. The result was overwhelming! After just 2 hours the plastic was as clean and white as new. I couldn't really believe my eyes.
So to sum up
TL;DR
- buy 40 vol hair bleaching product. Buy beauty saloon products not products for "home" use. I can easily find them on ebay, I paid just €2 for one liter
- mix: 4 parts of bleaching product, 1 part water, 0.5 parts oxy/vanish (the gelly/liquid version is easier to mix). You really don't need much product. To bleach the mouse you see below I probably needed 100ml product total
- put everything in a spray bottle and spray over the plastic
- expose to UV light (artificial is actually better than sun!!)
- spray again every 30 minutes or before it completely dried out
- in my experience after just 2-3 hours you are good to go. YMMV
Unfortunately I don't have the before picture, but believe me: it was incredibly yellow.
Now it's like this:

IMPORTANT: it's not a miracle formula, many things could go wrong. You may very well end up ruining your precious retro junk! Don't do it if you don't understand the risk!