Monday, December 3, 2018

Polymer Clay Christmas Trees


To make these Christmas Trees, you will need:

Premo White Translucent Clay 
Premo White Clay
Premo Green Clay 
Premo Red Clay
Premo Accents Gold Clay 

Soft pastels (greens & browns)
Parchment Paper  
aluminum foil
Roller or pasta machine
Pattern stamps
Gold mica powder
Sculpty Bake & Bond
Tissue blade & craft knife
Scissors 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

First, mold the aluminum foil into the size tree you want to make,
 then cover it with a "base coat" of conditioned clay.



These are the beginning of my two trees, ready to go into the oven. I guess you could make the trees with out curing the base first, but it would be more difficult.


(They were baked at 275 degrees for 1 hour.)

(You don't need the toothpicks, 😉 These Christmas Trees were an experiment and I thought tooth pics would be useful in holding up the "branches", but they weren't needed.)



Most of the stamps I used to create the Gold CT, were from a silicone strip used for fondant, I found it in the bakery section of AC Moore. As you can see, I cut many stamps out of the strip. 


The tree topper was made ahead of time. Use a round stamp. (it could be anything you already have), decorate with gold mica powder. (It was cured to be easier to work with later.)






 The gold tree was assembled in layers, staring at the bottom. Roll out a long thin sheet of conditioned translucent clay, I used #5 on my pasta machine. The clay has to be thick enough to take the stamp but thin enough to have light shine through after curing.

Use the scalloped stamp to make an impression. This is the stamp I used.


Cut the bottom of the scalloped edge first, before adding the mica power, then cut the top. 



Scrunch the top of the strip together to gather the lace.





 Use "bake and bond" as you affix the lace to the tree form. I didn't use a lot of it, just a little will do and only a bit on each row.  On the lower tiers, I added a round of rolled parchment paper between the layers, (see above), the roll was held together with a staple. I also stuffed small bits of P paper where needed to poof out the lace.

 I used quite a bit of rolled up parchment paper in this project. You can remove it easily after curing, nothing seems to stick to parchment paper, love the stuff. 
 Continue on until you reach the top, then affix your pre baked ornament. The balls were made with gold clay and rolled with gold mica powder.  They are hard to keep in place because the extra mica powder makes them slippery, just bake them separately and affix with super glue after curing.

(I baked my tree at 275 degrees for 1 hour.)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

That reminds me, there are a lot of little things that make this technique possible. For one thing, the surface you work on is important. I use a smooth tile, 8"x12". (pictured below)
You need a surface like this to cut around thin pieces of clay, as in this border. It would be very difficult to do if the clay didn't stick down to the surface. After the border is cut, you can lift it carefully with the help of your tissue blade. If it breaks, try making the clay a bit thicker. If you are a beginner, I strongly recommend watching as many Polymer Clay YouTube tutorials as you can, that is the way I learned about handling PC.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

For the Green Christmas Tree, condition your clay and roll it out on the thickest setting on your pasta machine.  Color with soft pastels as shown.



Use a round cutter to make circles and make cuts with scissors to form the pine needles.


Affix them in rows to the base tree with "Bake & Bond" as shown, no need to puff these branches out. Decorate as desired, "this is the fun part"
😉
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Here are the instruction for making the mini candy canes.

You will need well conditioned red and white clay and an extruder. I used the disks shown here, the tiniest two holes. Extrude and assemble as shown. There is a trick to doing the candy canes to make the red stripe nice and even, I only got good at it when I was working on the last ones, so the first ones are a bit wonky.

Hold the clay strips in position as you roll the white strip into the red one, then lightly roll the two together. (that's when they really start to look like candy canes) 
My candy canes are 1 1/2" long, but you can make them any size and any thickness. 

I think candy canes make great decorations on Christmas items. 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 





That's it, hope this tutorial helps you create your own Polymer Clay Christmas Trees.  If you wish to share your creations, I would love to see a picture. My user name on Facebook is "Evie Campbell" same avatar as the one in my blog.



















2 comments:

  1. Just lovely - thank you for such clear instructions! I look forward to following your blog!

    ReplyDelete