Introduction: Homemade Play-Doh
How to make homemade Play-Doh!!
Step 1: Step 1: Gather All Materials Needed
Gather all the materials needed for this activity:
1 cup water ,1 tablespoon vegetable oil, 1/2 cup salt, 1 tablespoon cream of tartar, Food coloring, Saucepan, 1 cup flour
Step 2: Step 2: Grab a Saucepan and Put It on the Stove
The stove needs to be on warm.
Step 3: Step 3: Put All Ingredients Except Flour in
The flour will be added at a later step
Step 4: Step 4: Add Flour After Warm
When the contents are warm inside add the flour.
Step 5: Step 5: Stir Until Thick Like Gravy
this will most likely take 3-5 minutes
Step 6: Step 6: Scrap Contents Onto a Table or Wax Sheet
Wait for the content to cool
18 Comments
6 years ago
playdoh
Reply 5 years ago
yes it is
7 years ago on Introduction
um, do you have to use vegetable oil?
7 years ago on Introduction
what can be a replacer for flour?
8 years ago on Introduction
its lovely and easy i like your taste
8 years ago on Introduction
I add a few drops of oil of wintergreen as a preservative.
8 years ago
And it's edible!
Reply 8 years ago on Introduction
Keep in mind 2 tablespoons of table salt is enough to kill a 60 lb kid. So, not so much.
Reply 8 years ago
Is that right?
Mind you, I thought the whole point was to make it salty enough it was inedible. So you could leave a lot of salt out for an edible version, perhaps?
Reply 8 years ago on Introduction
I think the salt content is primarily a preservative and possibly structure. I don't imagine it would be too palatable. If one has a kid that likes to eat non-food stuffs, this might be a project to pass over.
8 years ago on Introduction
We did this a lot when I was a kid. After you made some nice figures you can even bake them in the oven (like bread) at about 200-250F for a few hours and it will become hard like stone and can be stored indefinitely. This way you can also make de dough just plain white and paint the figures after baking.
Reply 8 years ago on Introduction
How hard, mechanically speaking, are the baked figures? How much do they deform during baking? My thought: if it's reasonably resistant, and doesn't deform much during baking, this could be a nice way of building plastic-equivalent pieces, way cheaper and faster than a 3D printer, for less demanding applications (say a custom Lego brick, or 3rd hand things).
Here's what I'm thinking of: http://www.amazon.com/Sculpey-III-Polymer-Clay-Ou...
Reply 8 years ago on Introduction
It's been at least 10 years ago since I did this so I'm not quite sure. I think they do rise a bit in the oven. It will get reasonably strong, but also a bit brittle.
The ingredients will cost you like $2 so I suggest to just try it and find out.
Don't forget to post your findings ;)
8 years ago on Introduction
Home-r-made D'OH!!
8 years ago on Introduction
Learned a new way to make it. Had to do it for a child development project years ago and I remember using packets of Kool Aid....made wonderful colors. Definitely going to try this one.
8 years ago on Introduction
good thing for children playing
8 years ago on Introduction
As Homer would say:
DOH!
8 years ago
Nice