We have been making a lot of our own Christmas decorations lately... mainly because it is something fun to do. I actually went out to the Christmas shops to buy some new decorations but they were all a bit cheap and nasty. In the end I didn't bother, I think we will just stick to making them.
Speaking of making Christmas decorations we have made some fabulous salt dough ornaments. I have found a new recipe for salt dough and I like it. It is based on a recipe I found at Mum in the Madhouse, but I have adapted it a little.
Salt Dough Recipe
2 cups of table salt (I find cooking salt too coarse)
1 cup of water
1 teaspoon of oil
1 cup of plain flour
1 cup of corn flour
Approximately half to one cup of cold water (during the kneading process)
Instructions: Combine the salt and one cup of water in a saucepan. Bring to the boil, let the salty mixture bubble for a few minutes while stirring. I thought this process might dissolve the salt completely but it didn't. After a few minutes take the saucepan off heat and add flours and oil. Stir vigorously. This is when I looked at my mixture dubiously – it was not a dough. I poured the whole lot on to the kitchen bench. When it had cooled the kids helped me with the kneading. I slowly added cold water to the mix until we had a good dough consistency. Once you have turned your dough into shapes or sculptures bake in the oven at low heat (150ºC or 300ºF) for 3 to 4 hours. Keep an eye on it so the dough does not burn.
The mixture after cooking the salt and adding in the flour |
Let's knead |
Making the shapes, I dusted some flour on the bench to stop the dough sticking |
Our salt dough shapes after baking in the oven for 4 hours |
We didn't get to paint our salt dough until the next day. Every single piece was painted and glitter was added too. I have stored the ornaments away in an air tight container ready for the Christmas tree. These salt dough ornaments are going to look fantastic! (Note: if you have issues with humidity you might want to seal with with a varnish as recommended by Learning 4 kids).
You can find all our Christmas craft ideas here.
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Linked to The Kids Co-op, Kids Get Crafty, It's Playtime and Tuesday Tots
They look fantastic. I love Salt dough decorations and yours are so sparkley (must add glitter to ours this year)
ReplyDeleteThanks Cerys, they added a tonne of glitter!!
Deletethat sounds like being home with Ali
ReplyDeleteyep it certainly is!
DeleteThey look lovely and so special! I haven't used cornflour in my salt dough before...might give this recipe a try. We were setting up the tree yesterday and i came across some salt dough tree ornaments that Miss Teen made over 10 yrs ago...those suckers have lasted and bring back so many memories...i have to get organised and make some with the twins...thanks for sharing x
ReplyDeleteThe corn flour gave it a really light colour which I liked. Glad to hear that your salt dough lasted 10 years, I hope ours do too.
DeleteHa, we have a very similar post saved in our drafts folder. I do love your salt dough recipe though, it is very different to mine. I will have to link up to your post when I finally get my published. The glitter looks great on the your ornaments, will have to remember this the next time we make them.
ReplyDeleteSo cute. Looks like you had a great time doing it. Such a wonderful Christmas Classic. Perfect.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing on Kids Get Crafty!
Maggy
Took a go at this ourselves this week, so simple and so easy on the pocket in comparison with what's being sold in the shops....my kids loved the decorating part, its a must for every year forth now....
ReplyDeleteWe will definitely be doing it again next year too. I agree with you, they are so much nicer than all the plastic stuff in the shops.
Deleteso cute! I'll have to give this one a go!
ReplyDelete