by Michelle Vackar, Modern Handmade Child
One of our favorite outside activities at our home is drawing with chalk on the driveway. You can play hopscotch, four-square, and of course draw and create silly stories. My daughters and I were talking one day as we played hopscotch about how to make chalk and I thought to myself, let’s try it! It ended up being quite a lot of fun.
What you will need:
• Toilet paper or paper towel tubes
• Scissors
• Duct tape
• Wax paper
• Small bucket or disposable container to make the recipe
• ¾ cup of warm water
• 1 ½ cups Plaster of Paris
• 2-3 tablespoons of tempera paint
• Paper bag or a “mess mat”
** we made six tubes of chalk – we simply doubled the above recipe.**
Step 1: If you are using paper towel tubes, cut each tube in half, so it is roughly the length of a toilet paper roll tube.
Step 2: Cover one end of each tube with duct table to hold the contents within.
Step 3: Cut as many pieces of wax paper as you have tubes. Roughly 6 inches X 6 inches. Roll the wax paper loosely and insert into the tubes so as to effectively line the tubes. The top of the wax paper will be higher than the tubes. The wax paper liner will keep the chalk mixture from sticking to the cardboard tubes and will eventually be peeled off.
Step 4: Pour the warm water into your bucket. Sprinkle the Plaster of Paris over the water and stir the mixture with a plastic spoon. The Plaster of Paris roughly starts hardening within 20-30 minutes, so you need to work fast so that it does not harden too quickly.
Step 5: Next you will want to pour the tempera paint into the Plaster of Paris mixture and stir so that it is mixed thoroughly. If you would like brighter colors add more tempera paint into the mixture. We wanted to make a variety of colors of chalk, so we spooned about 1/2-3/4 cup of Plaster of Paris in each separate container and mixed in the different tempera paint colors into each bowl. We ended up making six different colors and next time might mix more.
Step 6: Stand each tube with the tape side down on a cookie sheet/flat baking dish/box lid to make the project easier to transport to a drying location. Pour or spoon the colored Plaster of Paris mixture into the wax paper lined tubes. Lightly tap the sides of the tubes to release the air bubbles (so you do not have holes in your chalk). After you have poured the mixture into the tubes start another color. When done trim the excess wax paper so that it is closer to the cardboard tube.
Step 7: It took 3 days for our chalk to dry. On the last day, we peeled off the duct tape so that the underside could dry. When the chalk dries, peel off the paper tubes and wax paper. Your chalk is ready!
Modern Handmade Child is a seasonal online publication celebrating handmade living in a new way. Our mission is to provide a fun and valuable resource helping families to embrace the handmade way of life, by intertwining the skills and values of days gone by with the trends and technologies of today. Our editors and contributors come together from around the world, including Europe, Australia, Canada, and many parts of the United States. Modern Handmade Child is published quarterly, and available for free at modernhandmadechild.com.











































































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~Jenna, SAS Interiors
wait what? this is sooo cool! I will definitely make this with my kids. Thank you for sharing. It is so easy. Would food color work as well instead of the tempra paint?
This is fantastic ! Thank you ! I love these make and play activities
really fascinated idea , and creative activity for children’s ….. thanks
This is really great for a birthday party of my son! Thank you for sharing!!
Is the Plaster of Pairs used for this the dry mix?
I didn’t even know you could make your own chalk! But it is amazingly cool :)
the blue background on your page is worth mentioning!
This is a great science activity for studying states of matter! Thank you!
WOW … Great for kids… i dont have kids but when ever will have kids.i would love to make it for them..thanks for sharing.. I love making these kinds of things myself…I think i’ll make them for myself.. :D
Fantastic, who would have thought I would come across an old friend’s website via stumbleupon?
Ha! That’s awesome Sarah-they’ve sent nearly 1million people to this one post pretty awesome that you found it via them too. Hope you & Patrick have fun making chalk!
wow thats so cool i want to try
Wow what a great idea. I’m going to make some as christmas gifts. I’m going to add this post to NZ Ecochick’s facebook page.
this is great! I’m sharing this with families on my facebook: http://www.facebook.com/growingmindscfdservices
keep up the great work!
This a great gift for kids to make for kids!
I’m not planing having kids too soon but I will definitely do this with them. I imagine this is something so great to do as it gets your kids closer to you. I don’t think there are too many family out there enjoying such activities and it’s such a pity.
Gonna do that for my kids!
Hi, plaster of paris can be toxic:
http://www.taxidermy.net/forums/MoldingArticles/04/041DF92AEC.html
Here’s a recipe that you can use instead:
http://www.essortment.com/crafts-make-plaster-paris-51564.html
It’s great for kids!
Love this!! Thanks for the tutorial..love,love,love and I’m making this for the grandkids!!
What is plaster of Paris? can I use any plaster?
Just as a note – saving a cardboard tube left over from gift-wrapping paper can do an entire project, it makes five-six tubes easy.
this is so neat!! totally going to try this this spring!
this is a fantastic idea! we just LOVE sidewalk chalk, so i know we’ll be trying this! :) lisa
great carnt wait to make these with my boys thyll love it :)
this is so awesome! i’ll definitely be making this with my nieces. we’re linking to you tomorrow!
How fun…and what a great bunch of helpers/artists you have! I featured this today. Come by and check it out and to see the other projects I highlighted…
http://www.snugasabugbaby.com/toddlerartprojects/
going to give this a try but going to use homemade plaster of paris hope it works
Thanks for sharing
Michelle
Thank you for this. I host a lot of parties and I think that this might be a hit!
I don’t have time to look at all the comments so sorry if this has been asked but want to make sure. You took 1/2-3/4 cup of plaster at a time with less water or do you mix them all together and then separate out and add the colors? Hope that question makes sense :) Thanks!
This is awesome, even better that kids could make them…I love the photos of the kids making them.
OH MY! My neice will love this! Its such a great activity! I never know what to do when I have my neice with me. I hate sitting her down to watch tv. She would think this is the coolist thing ever.
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xoxo
THAT LOOKS REALLY FUN! :) to write with:)