Make your own modelling clay with this simple recipe.
I found this recipe on The Imagination Tree and wish I’d found it earlier, it’s so easy and so much fun. I may never buy play-dough again! It’s great to model with and can be baked in a low oven to harden and paint if you wish.
We used the plain white clay to make Christmas ornaments but I can’t wait to add some colour to this mixture to see how it turns out. We did add glitter which made a lovely sparkly clay.
What you’ll need:
1 cup bicarbonate of soda
½ cup cornflour
¾ cup warm water
Saucepan and wooden spoon
Mix dry ingredients in the saucepan and add the water.
Stir over a medium heat until it starts bubbling on the surface and eventually pulling away from the sides of the pan (this will take approx. 3 – 5 minutes).
Leave to cool before tipping onto a work surface and kneading until smooth.
Add glitter at the kneading stage if you’d like sparkly modelling clay.
This simple 2 ingredient recipe for modelling clay needs cornflour, bicarbonate of soda (and water).
Mix all the ingredients in a pan and stir over a medium heat.
Keep stirring! The mixture will bubble on the surface and start to thicken.
After 3 – 5 minutes the mixture will come away from the sides of the pan and form a soft dough.
Leave to cool then turn out onto a worksurface and knead until smooth.
We wanted to make Christmas ornaments with our white modelling clay so I got rolling pins, cookie cutters, a knife and a wooden skewer ready.
Roll out the modelling clay and cut shapes.
Move to a flat baking tray to dry out. Make a hole at the top with the wooden skewer for ribbon.
I got given this wonderful rolling pin for my birthday one year and it makes beautiful patterns as you roll.
Embossed modelling clay cut into rounds.
Dry the shapes in a very low oven for a couple of hours, or leave to dry in a warm place for a couple of days. Thread with ribbon, tie a knot to make a loop.
The finished ornaments on our tiny Christmas tree.
You can also add glitter to your modelling clay at the kneading stage.
Sparkly modelling clay.
I bought some snowflake icing cutters to use on the modelling clay to make snowflakes to hang from fishing wire in our front window.
Lots of snowflakes drying.
To make a snowflake hanging garland you’ll need dried play clay shapes, a glue gun and fishing wire or invisible thread.
Glue the shapes on lengths of fishing wire or invisible thread. I glued 7 or 8 on a piece of thread the length of our front window. I hung 5 strands of snowflakes in the window.
art
/ science
/ christmas
/ decorations
This simple 2 ingredient recipe for modelling clay needs cornflour, bicarbonate of soda (and water).
Mix all the ingredients in a pan and stir over a medium heat.
Keep stirring! The mixture will bubble on the surface and start to thicken.
After 3 – 5 minutes the mixture will come away from the sides of the pan and form a soft dough.
Leave to cool then turn out onto a worksurface and knead until smooth.
We wanted to make Christmas ornaments with our white modelling clay so I got rolling pins, cookie cutters, a knife and a wooden skewer ready.
Roll out the modelling clay and cut shapes.
Move to a flat baking tray to dry out. Make a hole at the top with the wooden skewer for ribbon.
I got given this wonderful rolling pin for my birthday one year and it makes beautiful patterns as you roll.
Embossed modelling clay cut into rounds.
Dry the shapes in a very low oven for a couple of hours, or leave to dry in a warm place for a couple of days. Thread with ribbon, tie a knot to make a loop.
The finished ornaments on our tiny Christmas tree.
You can also add glitter to your modelling clay at the kneading stage.
Sparkly modelling clay.
I bought some snowflake icing cutters to use on the modelling clay to make snowflakes to hang from fishing wire in our front window.
Lots of snowflakes drying.
To make a snowflake hanging garland you’ll need dried play clay shapes, a glue gun and fishing wire or invisible thread.
Glue the shapes on lengths of fishing wire or invisible thread. I glued 7 or 8 on a piece of thread the length of our front window. I hung 5 strands of snowflakes in the window.