Introduction: Homemade Air Dry Clay From 3 Ingredients (edible If It Comes to It)

About: Mom, wife, traveler, baker, jewelry maker...and so much more!

This Air Dry Clay is just oh-so-easy to make because you need just three ingredients and a few minutes of your time!

If you have young kids, you’re probably an expert on clay, plastiline, play-doh and slime. And maybe you’ve already spent tons of money on them. If your kid uses the whole package in one afternoon, it’s not a cheap fun. Fortunately, you can make your own homemade air dry clay and it doesn’t cost much! You need just three ingredients, or four if you want other colors than just white.

Supplies

(small batch)

  • 200 g/7 oz of baking soda
  • 100 g/3.5 oz of cornstarch
  • 150 ml/5 fl oz of water
  • food colorant in powder

Step 1: Why Is the Homemade Air Dry Clay So Great?

I’ve already mentioned the price. Making a 300 g white batch costs me about 0.57 EUR/0.63 USD, a colored batch a bit more (but I don’t include the energy needed for the few minutes of cooking or the water for washing up).

Another great thing is that you don’t need to go shopping every time you need a new package. You can stock up on the ingredients and whip up a whole batch in minutes on request (“mommyyyyy, I want to play with clay!”).

Also, the texture of the clay is just perfect. It’s soft yet solid enough for modelling. It’s really smooth when you roll it out and really easy to cut out shapes from.

Last but not least, if your kid eats the clay, no worries, it's all edible! I'd like to say they won't eat it because they won't like the taste but I have kids, so I know better ;-)

And before we start with the tutorial, let me invite you to the Clay Play category, where you can find many more clay tutorials and inspiration.

Step 2: How to Make It

Mix the starch and soda in a bowl, add water and mix well.

Pour the mixture onto a non-stick pan and heat whole stirring constantly. You can start at medium heat and once the mixture starts to solidify, turn it down. After a few minutes the mixture will become more solid and then you’ll be able to form a compact ball and it will stick to the pan less and less.

Switch off the stove, make a ball and let it cool down.

If you want to add the colorant, let the clay cool down enough so you can hold it in you hand, then make poke a small dimple in it with your finger, put the colorant in, close it and knead in your hands until the color distributes evenly.

For the 300g/10.6 oz batch I’d use about 5 g of colorant but it really depends on the required intensity of the color.

Step 3: What to Make From It and How to Store It

You can use it in the same way like you would any air dry clay – to make decoration, small figurine…just let it dry for one day and then you can even paint it. The clay isn’t suitable for jewelry or dishes.

Whatever you don’t use immediately just wrap it in some cling film and it will stay soft for a few days.

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