With Halloween right around the corner, I have paper mache projects coming out of my ears! There is something about this playful holiday that just brings out the folk-art in me. In the next so many weeks I will be sharing various tutorials but thought that I would share two different recipes that it takes to get started. Most of you have done some sort of paper mache during your time, but here is the paste recipe that I use to make basic forms:
Paste Recipe
2 Cups Cold Water
3/4 Cup flour
2 Tbsp. Sugar
Step 1: Boil 1 cup of water in sauce pan. While that is heating up, mix remaining cup of cold water with flour.
When water comes to a boil, pour in the flour mixture. Turn heat to medium-high and stir occasionally until it comes to a rolling boil. After boiling, mix constantly for 1-2 minutes, or until it thickens and turns a slightly translucent white.
Paste should be thick but still drip slowly from whisk (it will thicken more as it cools). Turn off heat and mix in the sugar. Let it stand until it cools enough to work with.
This paste can be used in many ways, but generally, it is used to make basic mache forms that can be either left alone or used as a base for other projects. Like you may remember from grade school, you take strips of newspaper, cover them with paste, and cover your form with several layers of paper mache fun. Hot dog!!!
Stay posted for another recipe before we get the Halloween projects started!!!!!
Linked to: Southern Lovely, Yesterday on Tuesday, Tatertots and Jello
Linked to: Southern Lovely, Yesterday on Tuesday, Tatertots and Jello
Great info!
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking up to Show & Share!!
How long does it take for this to dry?
ReplyDeleteIs it ok to add sugar? Won't it attract ants?
ReplyDeleteJust what i've been looking for!! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeletethx!! how long is the batch good for?
ReplyDeleteI have done paper mache for years now and have never added sugar or heated it... Just take flour and add warm water until it's as thick as elmers glue...works the same way.. I have done many projects doing this with my kids head start school classes.
ReplyDeleteThat's how I have always done it too! :)
DeleteWhat is the purpose of the sugar? I live in the south and that would just seem like an invitation for cockroaches. I put salt in mine to inhibit mold.
ReplyDeleteI moved to Minnesota and I'm concerned about ants. If salt will work, I'd rather use that. How did yours turn out?
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Will this paste attract mice or ants?
ReplyDelete