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DIY Marbled Paper

August 17, 2015 by Barbara Rucci 7 Comments

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make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

Have you ever tried marbling paper with shaving cream? We’ve done it in art camp many, many times. Yes, it’s messy. But it’s also magical. The kids usually make and make until all the shaving cream is used up. This last time we went through six cans! I think they look like those beautiful Italian marbled papers. The best part is that they smell so good!!

Tip: If you are doing this process with more than 3 kids, it’s best to get a helper.

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

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Here’s what you’ll need:

~ Shaving cream (cheapest kind you can get, just make sure it’s white and not the gel!)

~ Tray, platter, or baking dish

~ Liquid watercolor, food coloring, or tempera paint (we used watercolor)

~ Eye droppers

~ Small jars, like baby food jars, or small bowls

~ Toothpicks, pencils, sticks, or a fork (something to swirl paint around)

~ Paper (we used sulphite paper, but you can use any white paper)

~ Spatula (I like using a metal one)

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

The process:

~ Start by spraying some shaving cream on the tray. Kids love this part!

~ Next, squeeze drops of liquid watercolor all over the shaving cream. I always try and keep the colors in the same color family. Blues/greens, or red/pinks, etc. This way the colors would blend together and make brown!

~ Now use a pencil or a fork and drag the ink across one way and then the other. Avoid having the kid swirl the paint in circles (which is their first instinct) because the marbleizing affect comes from the across motion. Just once one way, and then once the other way.

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

~ Now gently lay a piece of paper on top of your swirly color. Press carefully, so you can make sure all sides of the paper are touching the ink, but not so hard that the shaving cream oozes out the sides.

~ Lift off the paper. It will be hard to see the pattern because of the shaving cream. This is where the spatula comes in (and the helper). I find that the best system is to lay the paper down on a cookie sheet, scrape the shaving cream off with the spatula, then dump the excess into a bowl. You definitely need some room to work on the floor, or an extra table.

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

~ After one print is pulled off, the kids can add more ink, swirl again, and print again. When the shaving cream gets really mucky then just spray a new layer on top, and go again!

make beautiful marbled paper with shaving cream

We had marbled paper lining the floor, it was hard to find a place to walk! The kids got better and better at it the more they tried.

This technique of marbling paper with shaving cream is very popular. Everyone makes it their own, though. The Artful Parent uses slighty different tools, In Lieu of Preschool uses tempera paint, Meaningful Mama uses food coloring, and Honestly, WTF makes beautiful stationery with their marbled paper! I think our twist is doing it with a group (8 kids) and working out a good system.

Definitely give this a try! The very best part is at the end, when the kids finally get to stick their hands in the shaving cream and swirl all the color together and squish it between their fingers. A complete sensory experience.

xo, Bar

 

Filed Under: Open-ended Crafts for Kids, Teen Crafts, DIY Tagged With: shaving cream, liquid watercolors, marbling

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jeanette Nyberg

    August 19, 2015 at 3:40 pm

    That’s a whole lotta shaving cream to clean up!!! Your prints are lovely, and this reminds me to try this again. Our first try was sort of a disaster!

    Reply
    • Barbara Rucci

      August 22, 2015 at 4:35 pm

      Yes, but the good part is that everything is already soaped up! Plus I had my art camp helper and she was on dish duty 😉 Definitely try it again, it really works best when you just use 3 colors in the same family. And then I always add some gold to give it that fancy look! xo bar

      Reply
  2. Becky

    September 4, 2015 at 2:38 pm

    We did this a few months ago and loved it. Though I still have the stack of papers sitting in my craft room. You should do a post on what to do with the finished paper! 🙂 An old credit card/gift card works great for scraping off the shaving cream.

    Reply
    • Barbara Rucci

      September 6, 2015 at 3:19 pm

      hi becky! thanks for leaving a comment. yes, i have a stack of the marbled papers, too. I’ve been using them for stationery! i’m going to try and make them into envelopes and see of that works. thanks for the credit card tip! xo bar

      Reply
  3. Adele Grisham

    April 13, 2016 at 3:57 am

    This looks so fun and pretty!

    Reply
  4. Linsay

    July 5, 2020 at 3:20 pm

    I’ve done this with groups (8-10) before as well. Always a favorite! I had a Cool Color Tray and Warm Color Tray so we could avoid a muddy brown result. I’m curious about where the gold came into play? Did you use gold tempera or acrylic or paint markers after everything dried? I love that they dry so fast, you could probably use metallic paint markers 1/2 hour after the prints are made.

    Thanks for sharing!

    Reply
    • Barbara Rucci

      July 21, 2020 at 5:13 pm

      hi Linsay, I’m so glad you asked! The gold is actually gold liquid watercolor from Blick. So we added it to the shaving cream. Cool, right? xx Bar

      Reply

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I have been thinking lately about so many big idea I have been thinking lately about so many big ideas. They seem to be stuck, though, in the cogs of my brain. I need to articulate and connect these ideas together, but I can’t find the right words, or medium. It feels like trudging through thick mud, and then making the choice to set up camp in the muddy place. Maybe this is always what motherhood + living a creative life will be. And I am ok with that, too. Life is mucky, and even though I crave clarity, I am also acutely aware that this is why I also crave art. Music, books, museums, film, gardens… these are the mediums humans turn to when they need to find connection and, if we are lucky, clarity. But I feel more protective of my human-centered ideas these days and less willing to share them in spaces like this where they are open source. I don’t even know what is real sometimes. And how am I contributing to this landscape of creative and intellectual robbery. I think I am headed in a different direction but I don’t know what that is yet. Meanwhile, I am camping in the mud and looking for beauty where I am. 

Some moments new and old, lately…

1. Painting at my easel, age 4 when we lived in England before moving to the US. 
2. I tried making a video of motherhood on mother’s day inspired by this song 🌙 but never finished. 
3. Planting dahlias 🌸
4. Year 2 of my veggie garden. It is not going well. 
5. We diagnosed our garden problem as not enough sun so cut down a tree to give the sun a little path but then the sun moved. Also failing at science 😳
6. When you see your habits in your children ❤️ 
7. My mom’s caretaker gave me a cake and now I am a whole year younger 🙏🏼
8. Thank you James for the treats, mom dreams of traveling to visit your bakery but this was the next best thing 🥐
9. Finding 50 bucks in jeans from 20 years ago 👏🏼 Always check the pockets!
10. The newly graduated makeup artist with her kit off to a job 💋 
11. When the birthday kid isn’t home it’s too sad. must make art. 
12. When I am so dumb and share it on the internet 🙃
13. My heart, my clarity ❤️
14. Another round of silkscreening! Things are happening. 
15. MUA by Ava, and hanging out with the help 😍
16. Reminder.
Happy Earth Day! Can we agree that every day is Happy Earth Day! 

Can we agree that every day is Earth Day? The older I get, the more I change my habits to be kinder to this beautiful planet. Lately, seeing the photos from Artemis II of Earth from space has really moved me to make even more planet-friendly choices. Here are some things we do at home, and of course, we could always be better, but I also think small changes are more doable and sustainable, and if millions of us did just one of these things, it would make a difference.

Ok, here goes! My hope is that someone reads one of these actions and thinks, I can do this! We cannot reverse the melting ice caps, but we can stop further global warming… humans can do this if we work together. It starts small and is community-driven, so share this with friends!

1. Eating less meat, eating more veggies (this is also called eating low on the food chain). A vegetarian or vegan diet is a low-carbon diet. Did you know switching to 2/3 vegan reduces your carbon footprint by 60%? 
2. Grow our own veggies. Save on emissions and packaging, and find joy in gardening.
3. Less food waste. Eat leftovers, clear the fridge.
4. Buy less. Buy local.
5. Repurpose, fix, mend, thrift.
6. Make homemade gifts.
7. Drive less, fly less. (This one is harder, but being conscious of it is really important.)
8. Moderate, steady thermostat settings can save so much energy. Try 67/68 F in the winter and 72/73 in the summer and don’t touch it.
9. No pesticides on our lawn. It may not be pretty, but we have never had a beautiful lawn, and I’m fine with that. We also live on a river so the thought of polluting that water so I can have a perfect lawn is crazy.
10. Using non-toxic cleaning products or making our own from vinegar.
11. This year, we will do “no-mow May” to promote biodiversity, help the soil, and reduce emissions.
12. Vote for candidates who take climate change seriously!

Add some things you are doing in the comments. This is a judgment-free zone, so no preaching! But for real, we all can do a little bit better. 

The blog post about these signs is on artbarblog.com, link in bio!
New blog post! It’s about time I share my favorite New blog post! It’s about time I share my favorite materials that I bring to the library. Read the post for links and tips for how to pair these materials to foster deep engagement. Children have always needed time in childhood to use their hands to make things and play, but now more than ever, the skills they develop through these experiences are imperative for their future well-being and success. I’ve been reading everywhere about children’s “lost skills” in this new ed tech world where screens have replaced so much hands-on learning in the classroom, even as young as preschool 😞 Communication skills, flexible thinking, regulating emotions, building empathy for others, innovating, even core strength and pencil grips are a struggle. Offering time and materials for making things and playing with ideas should not be a challenge; it should be as essential as filling bodies with fresh air and food. Play is how children learn! Anyway, I hope this post will inspire you to collect some things for making and maybe even join our Materials Matter course over on @the.creativityproject so that you, too, can become an expert at cultivating creative thinking through art making!
It’s almost impossible to concentrate or sleep or It’s almost impossible to concentrate or sleep or work or enjoy anything these days. I know joy is resistance, art is resistance, kindness and empathy are resistance, and I try and practice all of these things every day, and also boycotting and shopping local and volunteering and making calls and checking on my neighbors and bartering and keeping our big tree lit for the community. And still, it doesn’t feel like nearly enough. I know we probably all feel this way. And maybe the collective small things really do add up to bigger movements, I don’t know. It’s Sunday and my mom is in the hospital again and I miss my one at college and I had such a bad dream last night. My headspace is not in cheerleader mode which is my usual default. And yet… going through my camera roll to find photos of things I made did actually help today. And I have made a plan for future things to make. When I wake up in the middle of the night, the way I get myself back to sleep is by envisioning this one big installation idea I’ve had for years, it takes place in a forest and involves textiles. So maybe 2026 is the year for me to bring this to life, or begin the process. I think about this quote, and it helps, too: When you make art, you rebel against a world that fears vulnerability. Ok, I’m better. Thank you for listening 🤪❤️

Ps: It weighs on me that Meta should be part of the boycotts. If anyone has any ideas for building community and sharing somehow somewhere else let’s discuss.
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