HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN AIR DRY CLAY STENCILED FISH

School may be out for the summer, but today I’m sharing a cute little school of fish made using air dry clay.   These fish are fun and easy to make!   We decorated ours with stencils and colorful paint, but there are so many possibilities to decorate these! 

 

These fish can be displayed in a variety of ways to fit your decor.   Use them in a wall hanging, attach to a piece of driftwood to display on a shelf, or place one under a glass bell jar with a little greenery.

We lost our images sorry. If you make this, please email us your pictures.

SUPPLIES USED FOR AIR DRY CLAY FISH:

  • Air Dry Clay
  • rolling pin
  • wax paper
  • knife
  • fish template
  • fine grit sandpaper  220 grit
  • craft paint (project colors used:  Lemon Custard, Turquoise, Morning Blue, Gecko Salamandra, Mauve Raisin)
  • foam paint stamps or a stencil brush
  • stencils
  • cardboard / paper towels
  • wood beads
  • aqua spray paint
  • white cord
  • scissors
  • piece of driftwood
  • E6000 glue
  • 2 picture hanging hooks

Roll out the air dry clay to a size big enough for your fish template, unless you are good enough to free hand it, which I wasn’t.   The fish template I used was found on Google by searching   free printable fish template.   A butter knife was used to cut out the fish.  Place fish on a sheet of wax paper and leave to dry for several days.    Note:  The thickness of the clay will determine the dry time.   

This is what they looked like after they were dried.  You can see in the below picture that the fish have some rough edges and some imperfections.  I don’t have a lot of experience with working with the clay, but I found that using 220 fine grit sand paper smoothed them out nicely.

Here is what they looked like after a few minutes of sanding.  I cleaned them off with a slightly damp paper towel to remove the sanding dust before stenciling.

I sanded them for a few more minutes, but I didn’t spend a lot of time on it.  I used craft paint, foam paint stamps and stencils to add color to the fish.

A piece of cardboard was great to use for painting.  Squeeze a small amount of each paint color, then using a paint stamp (not sure if this is what it is actually called, but they were great for stenciling and were purchased at Hobby Lobby).  I dabbed a small amount of paint on the foam tip and then stamped it several times on the cardboard to remove most of the paint.

Here are closeups of the stenciled fish.

WALL HANGING:

 

To make a wall hanging,  I used a piece of driftwood that we picked up on vacation last year.  I spray painted a few wooden beads an aqua blue color and strung them on white cord.  I tied knots above and below the beads to help keep them in place.   The cord was wrapped around the piece of driftwood several times then the end was glued.

I screwed two picture hanging screws into the top of the driftwood and used the white cord to make a hanger which you can see in the photo below.

OTHER DISPLAY OPTIONS:

If the wall hanging is not your style, attach these fish to a base to display.  I made a quick display base from a dowel rod I had left over from another project.   I recommend using a larger width dowel rod than I did for stability, but I used what I had on hand.  Cut 3 equal size pieces at least the length of the fish and glue together with E6000 glue.  Attach the fish with the same glue.  Allow to fully dry before displaying.

I used a smaller piece of driftwood for another base.  Attach with E6000 glue.

Garden Vacuum For Leaves — Best Garden Vacuums for Leaves
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Garden Vacuums for Leaves

A leaf blower piles leaves up. A garden vacuum picks them up and shreds them in the same motion, turning a cubic metre of dry leaves into a quarter-cubic-metre of perfect leaf-mould feedstock. For under-tree borders, law

Read More »
Mini Tiller For Raised Beds — Best Mini Tillers for Raised Beds
Buying Guides
Harriet Greenfield

Best Mini Tillers for Raised Beds

A full-size rotary tiller is the wrong tool for a 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed — too heavy to lift in, too aggressive on bed walls, and impossible to manoeuvre between paths. A mini tiller — also called a cultivator —

Read More »
Best Cordless Hedge Trimmers
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Cordless Hedge Trimmers

Cordless hedge trimmers have all but replaced petrol for home use. Modern brushless 40–60V models cut as fast as the old 25cc petrol units, weigh half as much, and don’t fill the garden with two-stroke smoke. The only

Read More »
Wood Chipper For Branches — Best Wood Chippers for Branches
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Wood Chippers for Branches

If you’ve got a tree-lined property, a wood chipper turns the annual fallen-branch problem into a free supply of mulch. Domestic-grade chippers handle branches up to 75 mm comfortably — anything thicker and you’re look

Read More »
Pressure Washer For Patios — Best Pressure Washers for Patios
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Pressure Washers for Patios

Pressure washing a patio is one of the most satisfying jobs in the home garden — you watch years of grime, lichen and mossy build-up dissolve into fresh stone in a single afternoon. The right pressure washer makes it q

Read More »
Chainsaw For Firewood — Best Chainsaws for Cutting Firewood
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Chainsaws for Cutting Firewood

Cutting your own firewood is one of the great satisfying jobs of country life — sawdust on your boots, the woodpile rising, the warmth of working ahead of winter. The right chainsaw for the job depends mostly on the wo

Read More »

Back to top button