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Filling the house with (literally) beady eyed creatures since forever*
Showing posts with label Moulding Baby Hand and Feet Imprints from Polymer Clay baby handprints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moulding Baby Hand and Feet Imprints from Polymer Clay baby handprints. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Homemade Clay Keepsake – Tiny Fingers and Tiny Toes


People often receive a kit for making plaster casts of their baby's hands and feet. The kits look so cute themselves that I suspect many of them remain unopened on the shelf. I wasn't given a kit (cue violins) so did some research into making my own imprints using some polymer clay I had sitting around.

When Thomas was 9 weeks old I grabbed a spare 20 minute slot in his feeding / changing / sleeping schedule to make these handprint and footprint moulds.


I took a basic salt dough recipe and threw in some wallpaper paste and sizing. I’m sorry I can’t be more precise but with my baby addled brain I was just happy to be creating something again (creating a baby WAS pretty special but you don’t get to play around with the mixture much).
I divided the mixture into 4 even sized patties.
Thomas then placed his tiny little hands and feet carefully and willingly into each patty, ha ha, until a clean and deep imprint was formed. Then I washed everything that came in contact with the mixture – hands, feet, eyebrows, nostrils etc (mine not Thomas’s).
Into the oven with the moulds to dry out at a really low temperature for a really long time. Then I left them in the sun for a couple of weeks until I was sure that they were really dry. The final consistency was almost crisp on the outside but oddly elastic too. I had been worried that they might crack if they dried too quickly which is why I took a long term approach to drying them.


When a 30 minute slot came available (afternoon nap cancellation) I got stuck into a packet of Sculpey and kneaded and kneaded and kneaded until it was soft enough to push into the moulds. I trimmed the excess Sculpey from the edges and removed the hands and feet from their moulds to place in the oven for curing.


Finally, months later, I painted around the outline of the hands and feet in white acrylic paint. One day, some time before Thomas leaves home, I would like to mount them and frame them and put them on the wall. 
Voila!


P.S. – the salt dough moulds look quite good themselves. Not sure how well they will last, as they never seemed to completely cure and the wallpaper paste didn’t contain an anti-mold agent (definitely pro-mould though – pleased with how well they worked).

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