Make Your Own Clay and Homemade Doll Accessories
Wednesday, December 19th, 2007My daughter and I made some clay tonight so that we could make doll accessories for her doll house.
First you put in 2 cups of plain flour. Feel free to get the flour on your hands!

Then you add 1/2 a cup of salt.

Next, you add 3/4 cup of water…

…and mix.

This will make a very thick, sturdy clay that you can mold into small accessories for your doll house. We used toothpicks for modeling tools. At one point our clay got so dry that it was hard to make the items we wanted without the dough cracking. We each wet our hands, slung the extra water off, and worked the clay with our damp hands. This helped a great deal.

We have a set of canisters, a mantle clock, a round tray, a container with a lid, a candlestick holder, a box that we’ll surely find a use for, and what will be a bag of flour for the kitchen.
Place the items on a baking tray and bake at 350 degrees until the clay is hard. Test carefully, supervise children, don’t get burned. Small pieces will burn quickly, so watch closely. Some thicker pieces may take up to half an hour or so.
Tomorrow we will paint the pieces with acrylic gesso, let dry, and then decorate with acrylic paints.
I’ll show you what we end up with!
Lynn
PS - This is how they ended up:




The Hundred Dresses
The Family Under the Bridge
Caddie Woodlawn. With the Wisconsin big woods theme, goes along great with a FIAR study of The Raft.
A Year Down Yonder
A Charlotte Mason Companion: Personal Reflections on the Gentle Art of Learning
Pocketful of Pinecones: Nature Study With the Gentle Art of Learning: A Story for Mother Culture. Sweet fictional story about a newly homeschooling mother who incorporates nature study.
Nature Crafts for Kids: 50 Fantastic Things to Make With Mother Nature's Help
The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady
At Hanka's Table
The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition
Awakening Beauty the Dr. Hauschka Way
A Redbird Christmas: A Novel
The Usborne Internet-Linked Book of Knowledge
What Your Fifth Grader Needs to Know
for you to leave a comment, but you can also e-mail me at lynn AT thehealthyhomeschool.com


