
Somehow in the last few weeks, my 2-year old has discovered the wonders of baking and art. We push the kitchen chair up to the counter and she "helps" me bake. That is, she dumps flour randomly in bowls and adds unnecessary eggs to my doughs. Sigh. My mother-in-law suggested salt dough ornaments, and they are perfect for her. It's hard to mess up the dough, and they've given her the chance to try painting (after I covered her in my old clothes, the table in plastic and the floor in towels).
Now, perhaps I'm biased, but just check out her brilliance, the careful application of paint, the deliberate selection of complementary colors...the paint flowed from her brush with stunning ease.

salt dough garland and ornaments
you will need:*
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup table salt
1/2 cup warm water
cookie cutters
straw
paints
ribbon
*For cutters, any shapes will do. I used a 2 1/2" and a 1 1/2" circle cutters. I used craft store acrylic paints. Dough can be doubled, too.


I love salt dough. I have made so many things from salt dough I can't even remember them all. It's such a fabulous project for kids!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely idea!
ReplyDeleteLove it! This is definitely going on our "winter break art projects" list. :) Do the ornaments need to be thrown out afterward, though, or will they save until next Christmas, too?
ReplyDeleteI think you can keep them from year to year (at least, I'm going to try.) My guess is the salt preserves them. But I'd keep them sealed to keep critters away!
ReplyDeleteHi, I make salt dough Christmas tree ornaments and I can tell you that as long as you thoroughly dry them out and when decorated, seal them twice with good quality varnish, you can get 30/40 years from them!
ReplyDelete