• TERRIFYINGLY REALISTIC FAKE BLOOD – Engineered with a guilty conscience to be terrifyingly realistic, this fake blood splatters, sprays, drips and dries just like the real thing.
  • SIMULATE UNTOLD NUMBER OF GORY MISFORTUNES – Perfect for creating cuts, wounds, bites, tears, abrasions, gashes, lacerations, stabbings, hemorrhages, amputations, de-glovings, and whatever else you can come up with.
  • ALSO GOOD FOR CRIME SCENES – Like real blood, which is good for keeping you and your vampire paramour alive, I Can’t Believe It’s Not Real Blood is versatile. Apply it to skin as well as clothes, floors, doors, walls, and/or windows. It may or may not pass a CSI lab analysis.
  • TIPS FOR BLOODY CLEAN UP – It looks good in person and on camera… and tends to keep looking good. 100% washable. While a few scrubbings will get rid of it, consider applying Vaseline or lotion to skin before use. Also, we highly discourage drinking and consumption.
  • LUCKILY THERE’S A LOT OF IT – Feel free to use this bottle liberally, as you have 16 ounces of quality fake blood that won’t dry out any time soon and doesn’t need to be refrigerated. Here at Maven Gifts, we only needed half a bottle to convince our boss of a Bubonic Plague outbreak, securing a well-deserved three-day weekend.

Very realistic. When wet it looks like real wet blood & when dry it looks like real dry blood. If you're looking for something that dries with a wet look this is not it. It takes a long time to dry if you use a lot. When dry you can touch things without getting fake blood on them, but if it gets wet AT ALL do NOT touch anything that you don't want to get red smudges on. It does wash off easily with water for the most part. It stains your skin a little bit, but that comes off after a few washes. It could totally be used as red skin dye by smearing it on, letting it sit & then rinsing off the excess. I soaked part of a white dress in the blood & splattered blood on the rest of the dress for a costume. Afterward I covered the dress in stain remover & washed it in cold water with a TON of bleach (which may or may not have been overkill). All of the splatters came out completely & even the soaked part of the dress was only left with a teeny tiny discoloration.

useful, good material for a situation in which you need simulated blood, good color and viscosity, very good price...i teach a blood spatter lab in my classes, and this does the trick, then can make a mess, fling blood hither and yon, and it doesn't break my department budget!

A little fake blood goes a long way. I used it to zombify a costume and barely used 1/8th of the bottle. It appears as vibrant fresh blood. I wanted a more deoxygenated/cauterized look, mixing with cocoa powder did the trick. Although it did slightly stain my skin for a day it eventually comes out with repeated washing. I highly recommend for any of your bloody needs.

Used this blood for my indie short film and it came out really well on camera. I lathered it up all over the table, on a slab of meat, and all over my actress's face and hands, and squirted it on her face in one of the shots. Each shot looked as real as if our PA had fallen down and cut himself, and leaked blood all over the set. Normally using fake blood in large quantities over large surfaces cause it to dry quickly as well as look brighter and more orange, however this stayed consistent in every shot staying wet for about an hour. Definitely will use again. Thanks!

Looks pretty convincing, worked well for a performance project. For some uses, a thicker product would be better (to have drips that stay in place). Washed off skin easily - we did follow the instructions and apply lotion (foundation on the face) first. Where there was no lotion, some pink color remained on the skin after washing, but this wore off over the course of a day.

This is some of the best stage blood I've ever used, and, believe me, over the last 45 years I've tried a LOT! It looks like fresh blood, as in, as red as fresh blood. It has the perfect thickness and even drips like real blood. Hell, it even dries like real blood, although it doesn't turn brown like real blood does. (If this sounds a little ghoulish, I've been doing theatrical make-up and making blood props for a very long time.) And you get a hell of a lot for the price! It has the standard down sides that pretty much any stage blood will have--it will stain your clothes, and will stain your skin if left on too long. I had no problem washing it off, but I've read some comments that it stained the skin pretty badly. I haven't had that experience. Although it has nothing in it that would be dangerous to ingest, I would use it sparingly near the mouth. If you want something safe to use in the mouth, make your own out of maple syrup and food coloring. All in all, I'm very happy with this stage blood. I'd say that it has become my go-to blood for prop knives, wounds, etc.

Great product, mix a little black and coffee grounds in and let it sit for 24 hrs and it ages up nicely too. I used it war battle up a Game of Thrones Cosplay. great on clothes and face.

I used it for a Carrie cosplay, and it worked really well! Came right off in the shower with a soapy rag even though I had it on for a solid 10 hours. It worked really well on my dress too!

Used for Halloween and looks like real blood. Put it on a cotton jacket and then put it through the washing machine. Couldn't tell the jacket ever had this on it so it comes off well without staining on a white jacket. No smell that I could detect.

Great product. It does feel and look like real blood. I used this on windows and mirrors for a halloween party. I wanted to put it on my white walls walls, but it stained my hands for ~4 hand washes when I used bare hands to apply the blood to my windows, so I decided not to put it on the walls for fear of staining. I should not that I didn't test it though, so it may be OK. A few drops landed on some un-sealed wood. I was able to wipe it up with no residue behind, which was great. A little of this goes a long way! I definitely recommend this.