How to make playdough with glitter


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We recently made some playdough.  And it was pretty easy to do, plus for DYI-ers like us, a lot more fun than just opening a can.

Here is what was in it:

2 cups flour

2 cups warm water


1 cup salt


2 Tablespoons vegetable oil


1 Tablespoon cream of tartar (optional for improved elasticity)


Mix all in a saucepan and cook.  At first I was dubious, it looked like crumbly pie crust gone bad.  But all of a sudden, as it cooked, it turned into playdough.  One minute, I was ready to toss it out, the next, it looked and felt like the real stuff.

At that point, we added scent.  Sugarwings chose mint extract. I voted for orange or vanilla, but she won.

That is usually how it goes around here.


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Once it cooled, we mixed in food coloring. I heard you could use Kool-Aide, but that isn't something we keep on hand and this was a spur of a moment idea.  So we tried the expensive, paste kind of food coloring that comes in so many pretty colors.

A couple were okay, but most turned it odd tones. The plum shade made a yucky shade of brown. Well, yucky till we decided it looked like gingerbread, it's all in how you look at it.


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After that, we tried the cheapo, 4 pack of liquid colors. It was quite messy, but the color was truer.

(all the liquid food coloring washed out of her clothes, wore off her skin, but some of the paste coloring stained the white table.  I've not made much of an effort to get it off, bleach will probably do it.  Or another coat of white paint?)


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After we worked the color throughout the dough, we piled on the glitter. And LOTs of it. This was a fine one, not too heavy, so it didn't feel gritty when you played with it.

(Make sure you don't use the glass stuff, sorry, I know that is obvious, but  I felt like I had to say it, I've seen that dangerous stuff used in some stupid places)


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The sparkles are very pretty in it. And the texture was really nice. The smell was wonderful, but between the talk of gingerbread and smell of mint, we had to whip up a batch of real gingerbread and throw ourselves a Christmas in July party.


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The darker the color, the better the glitter showed up. And Sugarwings likes adding color, so we had some pretty dark ones.

We've had the stuff wrapped up in zip lock bags and everything is as nice this week as it was last. I don't know if I'd store it too long, with no preservatives in it. It could go moldy. At least, that is my guess.


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5 thoughts on “How to make playdough with glitter”

  1. I made tons of play dough for my littles when they were growing up. It is easier of you just add the liquid food coloring to the water at the beginning so you don’t have to knead it in later. I used to make batches of different colors that way and store it in zip baggies.
    Pay dough and Legos never go out of style!

  2. I know she had the best time making things with that play dough. Adding the glitter and scent made it all the more fitting for a fairy princess!

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