Thread #2962697 | Image & Video Expansion | Click to Play
File: IMG_5194.mp4 (3.7 MB)
3.7 MB MP4
Is it possible to modify a bikini so it falls off after the wearer wears it underwater for a few minutes or so? There's a lot of YouTube videos of people pranking each other by giving them a "dissolving bikini" and then laughing when it falls off in the water but most/all of them are fake and the bikini doesn't actually fall off. I could only find one dissolving swimsuit for sale online, it's a one piece and the reviews are somewhat mixed reviewers say you must size up, Fabric did rip a little (before it was wet?), No bra padding, making it obvious it’s fake, Threads holding it together dissolve, not the whole thing. Still fun, even tho my wife was 99% sure what was going on…especially after we had to stretch it hard to get it on, but even after 10 min swimming in the lake only the sides had partly split, advertised.....Less than a minute in the water and the seams came apart. https://www.amazon.com/Dissolving-Swimsuit-Girlfriend-Bachelor-Swimmin g/dp/B0CR5HC6YH
There's a YouTube video by howcast about this https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cV0esyopY_Q with ten million views that states you should just take a regular bikini or one piece and remove all stitching and replace it with "water soluble stitching" and says it works fine in a sowing machine.
What kind of water soluble stitching should you use specifically? What kind of bikinis or one pieces will fall apart best without stitching? Ideally it should match the color of the original stitching, dissolve quickly and uniformly and should not rip prior to being worn in the water the stitching ripping when the bikini or one piece is pulled onto the wearer before going in water.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VBq5W1wCRj8
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=asg3hoJPYH4
Video review of that swimsuit from Amazon
He recommends a type of thread in the description and says he colored over it with a marker so it blended in
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Xq8tk0uLX2g
40 RepliesView Thread
>>
>>
hhmm first thought is medical, but those have a long lifespan and it seems like you want instant soo maybe an isomalt clasp. i assume the shear stress is lowest on the clasp because you over stretch the seams to hook the clasp.
the water could be lubrication for a bad knot, a couple horse hitches while frolicing in water should give its not timed like an isomalt clasp or surgical sutures. weird idea but those invisble bandaide from johnson & johnson have some elasticity so you could put it on and will dissolve after hours of sweat so maybe salt water
>>
>>
File: 9rcgaxftxpi91.jpg (83.6 KB)
83.6 KB JPG
My first thought is sugar. But that dissolves to fast and might dissolve before you get in the water. But if you make it thick enough I bet it would work without any additives.
Captha: N0XXX
>>
>>
File: mommaburn.jpg (200.1 KB)
200.1 KB JPG
>>2962783
I thought you wanted the whole thing to dissolve. Huh. I guess make sugar fiber then spin it into sugar string. Like cotton candy. Do you need the stitching to come undone? Couldn't you just make the tie strings dissolve instead?
>>
>>
File: stacies vs stemcel girls.jpg (623.5 KB)
623.5 KB JPG
Imagine Caroline in one of these bikinis
>>
>>
>>
>>2962697
cant you make thread with the same kind of plastic that tide pods are made from? google that type of plastic and then google where you can buy thread with it and then google some sewing tutorials
im sure its harder than that since im 100% sure the tide pod plastic formula is secret (there are a brazillian types of plastics) but surely you can find something
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>2962697
What if someone buys or shoplifts bikinis from a store brings them home replaces all the stitching with water soluble stitching and then returns the bikinis with their tags still on and puts them back on the shelf for some unsuspecting customer to buy?
>>2962920
How long would a bikini made of this stitching last on a shelf before falling apart? Would humidity destroy it?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>2962843
No, there are no documented cases of anyone being charged with product tampering, fraud/theft, indecent exposure/assault, or placed on a sex offender registry specifically due to a dissolving swimsuit prank (e.g., altering and returning swimsuits or tricking someone into wearing one). Extensive searches across news, legal databases, and social media discussions turned up only hypothetical warnings, prank videos, and Reddit speculation about potential risks, but zero verifiable arrests, charges, or convictions tied to this scenario in 2023–2025 (or earlier).
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>2963017
>>2963033
If you want regulated dissolving in water put whatever youre dissolving in a plastic tube to protect it from humidity but water will come in (or be wicked by the fabric) when submerged. Put some holes to make it faster or make the tube longer to make it slower. Very rough recipe: cut the strings, put both ends into a piece of tube from opposite sides, boil water, saturate it with sugar or isomalt (for table sugar 5:1 by weight), pour or inject the hot mixture in the tube. As it cools down it glues the strings together.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: IMG_1410.jpg (116.8 KB)
116.8 KB JPG
When is OP gonna post results?
>>
I'm going to assume that the recipient does not know about your plans in advance, or are at least playing along and feigning ignorance for purposes of mutual sexual gratification.
Your options are to modify the fabric, the stitching/adhesive, or the buckles/fasteners, if there are any.
Fabric: Could try making one out of paper. You'll have to find something that is robust enough to stitch or glue but that loses strength when wet. Paper clothes were a thing back in the Sixties, might be worth looking into. Supposedly the material felt kind of like suede or doeskin.
Alternatively, there is a material called vilene that dissovles in water. It looks like white tissue paper, but feels like fabric. It might work if you layered it.
I have no ideas on stitching, catgut (surgical thread) takes too long to dissolve and I don't know of any other thread materials that would dissolve at all.
Glue would be easy to replace with something water-soluble that is still flexible. I don't know if there are swimsuit styles that use adhesive rather than stitching, but that might be something else to look into.
Buckles/fasteners... call me crazy but you might be able to use molded pasta or starch for this. You know those biodegradable straws? Something like that would lose strength in short order, but not immediately.
An alternative approach: buy a very sheer swimsuit (the more see-through the better) and coat it with something that makes it appear opaque when dry. Or find one that looks solid when dry but sheer when wet. You can look up some very nice pics of Julia Fox that demonstarte what I'm talking about.
Honestly, if you're just trying to find a way to indulge you or your wife's exhibitionist streak, you might want to just get her a Wicked Weasel bikini and one of those semi-sheer beach robes.
>>
>>2962804
Here’s what I don’t get: if they are so smart, why can’t they get a proper haircut?
It’s like that superhero dr Manhattan, if he’s so alll-powerful, how come he can’t erase that atom symbol from his forehead, shrink down to a reasonable size and materialize a tracksuit so he’s not naked. Maybe he did, and it was made out of dissolving thread and it’s gone now after he went swimming.
>>
>>2970482
>why can’t they get a proper haircut?
All 4 have a proper haircut. What they don't have is a stylist spending an hour doing their hair and then the photography assistant spending a few hours in photoshop making sure the picture looks perfect.
>>
>>
>>2962697
> No bra padding, making it obvious it’s fake,
What? Unpadded/unlined swimsuits should be the only swimsuits there are. Besides the obvious, coomeristic reasons, it’s also much more comfortable, if you have the least amount of fabric, so it won’t take forever to dry, once you’re out of the water.