JJ

15/10/2005 9:48 PM

I MADE SOME SAWDUST CLAY

I used the 2 parts sawdust, 1 part flour, add water, recipe. Did
this about a week ago. Just made up a little. Used too much water, so
took about 3 day to properly. Turned out pretty good. Mix up a bunch
(without the water), it'll get rid of a lot of sawdust for you, and if
you give it to someone that thinks they can sculpture, it's a really
cheap gift.

Or, you can mix up a bunch (no water again), and give it to a child
care center, kindergarten, or similar, and it's a nice warm fuzzy gift,
give the kids some fun, and a good way to get rid of sawdust. I'd
screen it, for splinters, just-in-case.

I only mixed up about a small handful, just to try it. Seems like it
would be pretty durable, one it's dried out well, and maybe painted.
Not sure how it would sand, I'm thinking use finer sawdust, and it might
be OK. I think too, with real fine sawdust, it might make a decent wood
filler - but, I'd want to test it first.



JOAT
Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person
who doesn't get it.


This topic has 4 replies

Ee

"EXT"

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 15/10/2005 9:48 PM

16/10/2005 5:07 PM

Sawdust, flour and water, been there, done that, as a child. It is not very
strong, does not last more than a couple of days without growing mould,
cannot be used in thick layers without turning sour or going mouldy before
it dries. I would not give it to anyone as a gift, as it has such limited
uses and useable life. Fine for playing with yourself or for your own child
where you can control its use and check it for turning bad.

"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I used the 2 parts sawdust, 1 part flour, add water, recipe. Did
> this about a week ago. Just made up a little. Used too much water, so
> took about 3 day to properly. Turned out pretty good. Mix up a bunch
> (without the water), it'll get rid of a lot of sawdust for you, and if
> you give it to someone that thinks they can sculpture, it's a really
> cheap gift.
>
> Or, you can mix up a bunch (no water again), and give it to a child
> care center, kindergarten, or similar, and it's a nice warm fuzzy gift,
> give the kids some fun, and a good way to get rid of sawdust. I'd
> screen it, for splinters, just-in-case.
>
> I only mixed up about a small handful, just to try it. Seems like it
> would be pretty durable, one it's dried out well, and maybe painted.
> Not sure how it would sand, I'm thinking use finer sawdust, and it might
> be OK. I think too, with real fine sawdust, it might make a decent wood
> filler - but, I'd want to test it first.
>
>
>
> JOAT
> Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person
> who doesn't get it.
>

JJ

in reply to "EXT" on 16/10/2005 5:07 PM

16/10/2005 8:36 PM

Sun, Oct 16, 2005, 5:07pm etonks@sunstormADD-DOT-COM (EXT) who doth
sayt:
Sawdust, flour and water, been there, done that, as a child. It is not
very strong, does not last more than a couple of days without growing
mould, cannot be used in thick layers without turning sour or going
mouldy before it dries. <snip>

Well, I can't say I play with myself. Strength isn't an issue.
What I mixed up is solid, isn't getting moldy, doesn't seem to be sour
(don't know what you mean by sour even). No problem if it happens
anyway, give it to a kid(s), let 'em play with it, toss it after, give a
fresh batch next time.

If you're not happy with that recipe, then give us a recipe that
won't do all those bad things your're complaining about.



JOAT
Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person
who doesn't get it.

EP

Eternal Pesimist

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 15/10/2005 9:48 PM

16/10/2005 5:34 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> I used the 2 parts sawdust, 1 part flour, add water, recipe. Did
> this about a week ago. Just made up a little. Used too much water, so
> took about 3 day to properly. Turned out pretty good. Mix up a bunch
> (without the water), it'll get rid of a lot of sawdust for you, and if
> you give it to someone that thinks they can sculpture, it's a really
> cheap gift.
>
> Or, you can mix up a bunch (no water again), and give it to a child
> care center, kindergarten, or similar, and it's a nice warm fuzzy gift,
> give the kids some fun, and a good way to get rid of sawdust. I'd
> screen it, for splinters, just-in-case.
>
> I only mixed up about a small handful, just to try it. Seems like it
> would be pretty durable, one it's dried out well, and maybe painted.
> Not sure how it would sand, I'm thinking use finer sawdust, and it might
> be OK. I think too, with real fine sawdust, it might make a decent wood
> filler - but, I'd want to test it first.
>
>
>
> JOAT
> Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person
> who doesn't get it.
>
>
Here is a slightly modified formula.

2 c. sawdust
1 c. flour
1 tbsp. glue
Hot water or liquid starch

Moisten with water or starch until modeling consistency is reached.
Will dry hard, may be painted

Cs

"CW"

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 15/10/2005 9:48 PM

17/10/2005 12:10 AM

That's a new one.

"EXT" <etonks@sunstormADD-DOT-COM> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...


>Fine for playing with yourself


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