the space between

upcycle, repurpose and reinvent your space

  • about
  • aruba
  • key west
  • curacao
  • projects
  • house tours
  • privacy policy

diy salt dough star fish {ornament}

December 8, 2011

It’s gettin’ hot in here. Which isn’t good for these guys.

Well, to be honest, it’s always hot in here. We are only 12 degrees from the equator here on this little island. But it’s this time of year that gets pretty humid. We call it rainy season, some of you others know it as winter. 😉

I actually don’t mind the rain, it often brings down the temp and honestly, who needs sun every. single. day?

But, the down side is the humidity, you can just feel the moisture. And it definitely took it’s toll on my salt dough starfish.

I actually didn’t take any pictures of the destruction in action. I was just so irritated that my ornaments were literally swelling and falling off my tree. Man that Christmas spirit can be fleeting. :/

I got the salt dough starfish ornament idea from the Desperate Craft Wives who had made a starfish garland out of salt dough for a nautical inspired bedroom. Didn’t theirs turn out so great. Kinda makes all you coastal lovers want to try it, right?!?! Super easy, 3 ingredients,  bake for a few hours and enjoy.

Not so fast.

1st – These are the temp options I have on our gas stove.
I went all the way to the – sign and the little suckers still looked like this after about 20 minutes. Drats!
Take 2 – I baked for a very short period of time. The ornaments didn’t burn, they weren’t 100% dry (clearly!), but I figured they’d do. Wrong! They weren’t really the right color so I painted each one, added a ribbon hanger and they were down right adorable on the tree. Just the right look for our little coastal Christmas tree.

Until the other night when I came home to one that had fallen and noticed the others all bloated. Boo! Now, I had bought the salt and white paint specifically for this ornament as part of the Mega Crafty Christmas Tree challenge and I’ll be darned if I’m going to spend money and have it not work out for me.

So, 3 strikes and I’m out – Well, I’m out of new ideas but luckily I think this third time around the ornaments will at least last until Christmas if I keep baking them for an additional 30 minutes every few days are keepers. I used our trusty little toaster oven. Yep, it came here as part of our move essentials list and has proven over and over it is essential to us. Mostly for garlic cheesy bread. Yum!

I made a new set of the little bastards starfish. I actually was able to make rounds 1, 2 and 3 all with the recipe of 2 cups flour, 1 cup salt and 3/4 – 1 cup of water. After each round I wrapped the remaining dough in wax paper in a plastic bag and stored it in the fridge. This final round I baked for about 2 1/2 hours on 225. Nice and hard, but unfortunately yellow.
As you can see, my final shapes also changed a little bit along the way. The upside to having 3 go rounds is that I got to perfect my technique a bit. My personal salt dough starfish tips are:

  • Make a thicker, smaller in diameter ball of dough than you think you’ll need. As you cut out the starfish shape and even out each leg (?) the starfish will thin out and expand without you really trying. I wanted mine about 1.5 – 2 inches tall so my ball o’dough started at a little smaller than a quarter.
  • If your leg sections are unequal when you cut them, they will be unequal when your starfish shape is made. If that’s not what you want trim them before you make your shape to avoid frustration after.
  • Add less water to the dough than you think. My moisture issues have been clearly itemized.
  • Pointy leg ends and shallower veins and dots look more real in my opinion. Check out the pics above compared to this 3rd round pics.
  • A knife worked best for me to make the veins and an uncooked piece of spaghetti worked great for the dots (?) and to make the hole for the hanger.

When all was said and done I decided to get a little more creative with my 3rd and final round. I actually used a combination of beach sand, silver glitter and white and red paint to make these final starfish.

In the end, I love the look. I probably won’t try something like this again unless we move to a drier climate, but I do recommend the project. It’s cost effective and down right cute. I love the garland idea, and have recently seen all different size and shapes of salt dough ornaments out there. Maybe not worth ALL the effort I had to put into it, but a great addition to our 2011 tree.

What do you think? Any suggestions on how I could have avoided all my trouble? Were they worth the effort? Do you have any favorite salt dough shapes or uses? Are you in the Christmas spirit yet? Over all the Christmas ornament posts? Looking forward to the new year?

I am sharing this project here, here, here and here. Check ém out!

FREE diy ornament {egg carton and cookie cutter required}

December 5, 2011

I just made what I think are the cutest ornaments in the shape of dog bones.

What do you think? I am in love with them. And they were free!

Any guesses what I made them out of?

Now who doesn’t have an egg carton in the house? If you don’t, you probably need groceries…or have your own chickens I guess. 🙂

I had read a post about making ornaments out of construction paper, mixed with water, blended together and pressed into a cookie cutter. But, I can’t find it again, if it was you or know who it was, please let me know, I’d love to give you full credit for the idea!

Now I don’t keep construction paper on hand, but egg cartons are basically the same, right?

I ripped it up, put it in the blender, added water and blended away.
I tried to wash the blender thoroughly after, but the spinach smoothly I made next tasted a little cardboardy. My husband was quick to point out that they always taste cardboardy. 😉  (That’s all just a joke, except for the part about Joel thinking the spinach smoothies always taste like cardboard. The blender is squeaky clean, however.)

I think I had to add a lot of extra water to get it to mix properly because my blender sucks the egg carton is thicker than construction paper. So I had to press A LOT of excess water out of the mixture and was left with a few fist sized globs of wet egg carton mush.
At that point my plan was to just press my soggy carton mixture into the shapes I wanted, I was thinking hearts and stars. You know, just nice and easy like. But that just didn’t work out. There was still a lot of water to be pushed out and without any sort of a mold my shapes left a lot to be desired. As it turns out though, the only cookie cutter shape I have is a dog bone. A regular baker I am not. But, this little happy accident worked out perfectly. The girls needed some tree representation.

After I pressed and pressed and pressed (so much excess water) them into the cookie cutter I punctured 2 holes to string the hanger with the tip of a pair of scissors. I had to do it while it was still in the cookie cutter to not ruin the bone shape and I decided to only do this on the first one because I was worried that the puncturing process was messing with the bone’s structural integrity.
What is it with me and ornament structure integrity? I complained of my beaded snowflake’s lack of it here.

I figured I’d just get creative with tying a ribbon hanger around the second one and skipped making the holes. I then brushed a light coat of glue on just the top side of each bone for added integrity security. I figured the bottom side would be OK since it was perfectly flat and undisturbed.

Then I baked them for a bit in our toaster oven to make sure they were totally dried out and hardened. Maybe 30 minutes on 200, or maybe it was 2 hours on 250??? I don’t remember exactly but I would say start with option 1 and cross your fingers go from there. 🙂

The tree’s color scheme seems to be red, white and silver (more specifically silver glitter) so painting candy cane stripes on the bone ornaments was something I thought I could manage with my limited skilz without screwing up AND I already had red and white paint on hand so these were falling into the totally FREE category. Nice!

I don’t think I’ve done a budget rundown for all my homemade ornaments for the Mega Crafty Christmas Tree challenge. The only items I have had to buy are white paint, glitter and salt for a whopping $5.91 spent. Cha Ching!! Everything else I have used I either already had on hand, were scraps from previous projects or natural items that haven’t cost me cent. I’ll take A Decorated Christmas Tree for $6 please Alex. 🙂

And now, back to the bones. After they had cooled, I painted them completely white and then added the red stripes and used a black permanent marker to add our girls names and little paw print. I actually used what had been the bottom as the front part of the ornament, that side did turn out perfectly flat. Hello late night, bright flashy picture.
 Down right dog gone cute I say. 🙂 I hope you like ’em as much as I do.

free diy ornament tutorial

I only ended up using probably less than a quarter of the amount of mush that I made. But I only had the one cookie cutter and we only have the 2 dogs. But imagine the possibilities, I’m sure a lot of you have some pretty cool cookie cutters that would make neat ornament shapes. If anyone tries it out I’d love to see what you come up with!

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 162
  • 163
  • 164
  • 165
  • 166
  • …
  • 169
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · custom theme design by this bold girl · Built on the Genesis Framework 

  • pinterest
  • facebook
  • instagram
  • rss