
Polymer Clay Covered Eggs
When emptied of their contents and allowed to dry, chicken, duck, or goose
eggshells form an "egg-cellent" base that can be covered with
polymer clay to form sturdy ornaments and decorative objects for Easter or
other holidays.
Saving
up blown and dried eggs throughout the year is the easiest way to do a really
large number. Holiday baking (click
here for some favorite recipes) can be a good time to blow out lots of eggs, and there
are ways to do it more effectively and with no ear-popping results.
There are egg blowing bulbs available and they are often used in creating
Pysanky, the Ukrainian style eggs that are dyed using wax resists as are batik
fabrics. Many layers are applied and stunning results are achieved. Polymer
clay covered eggs can borrow from the designs and some of the tools as
well.
Here's a link to The
Caning Shop, which carries supplies for gourd crafts, chair caning, and
basketry as well as pysanky supplies.
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I
blow the eggs the old-fashioned way, but some people may not be
comfortable getting that close to an eggshell with their mouth. Get
the egg blower tools to avoid having to do that.
I start by rinsing and drying the eggs with a soft towel. Get a
bowl out to catch the raw eggs.
Using a metal shish-kebob skewer that was in my drawer of kitchen
stuff (you can also use a small sharp knife tip or a large needle) I
locate the central point of the egg and tap it gently but with enough
force to start chipping a little hole. |
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Keep
it small in order to keep the eggshell intact as much as possible, but
large enough to get the raw egg out. Do this on the other end of the
egg too.
Then insert a large, clean sewing needle and stir the egg inside
the shell to break up the yolk and make it all easier to remove.
Because I blow them out using my breath but my mouth does not touch
the raw egg, just the eggshell. I am careful to wash my mouth
afterwards, but I have no fear of using the eggs to bake cookies or
make a quiche or an omelet.
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My
son won't eat the eggs if he sees me doing this though, so do remember
to watch out for squeemish family members!
I put my mouth over the small end of the egg as though it were a
blowpipe. Filling my cheeks with air and forcing that into the egg
rather than blowing hard from my lungs keeps me from popping my ears
while doing several eggs.
This is similar to the difference in giving infant CPR and adult
CPR for those of you that have had your Red Cross Emergency First Aid
Training--and if you haven't, you can learn it free through most Fire
Stations and YMCA's.
After blowing out all the contents of the egg, wipe the shell with
a paper towel, and allow it to sit in the egg container.
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Although
some people rinse the insides of the egg with water, the coating of
dried egg will strengthen the shell. As it gets baked when the clay is
applied there is no extra health risk. However, egg dust is a known
irritant, so if you are going to use a saw or cut into the eggs with
power tools later, wear a mask.
Allow the eggs to dry for several days. Be sure to turn them over
once in a while, and remove any egg material that drips out before it
hardens. When completely dried, eggs are ready to cover with a
strengthening layer of clay. |
A thin base layer of clay is applied to the blown and dried eggs and
baked, then a decorative outer layer of clay is applied. The base layer makes
it easier to smooth the outer layer without cracking the egg. If you are used
to pushing more firmly, you may prefer using a very thin layer of clay wrapped
around the egg and baked, but this gives a much heavier finished product. This
can be done with thin sheets of polymer clay rolled to a #5 or #6 setting on
the pasta machine. However, I now often use the liquid clays for this purpose
and find that one or two coats of the colored TLS (Translucent Liquid Sculpey)
or liquid Kato Polyclay is sturdy enough for work done with a delicate
touch.
Available
in clear, gold, silver and black, the colored formulations of the liquid
clays are much thicker than the clear formulation and one generous coat
will suffice but two or even three coats works better with the standard clear
TLS or Kato Liquid clays. Kato is now
available in colors and other additives can also be used to tint them like
Pearl-X Pigments. It is important to bake the eggshells with the liquid clay
and mica powder applications the same day that you do them, as there is a
chemical interaction that happens otherwise--the thin layer will begin to
bubble up and separate. The higher the local humidity, the faster it
happens--what took 3 days of neglected egg-making in Denver to occur happened
overnight in Mississippi. Bake your eggs that day for best results!
The eggs shown here are baked and awaiting more decoration---and the safest
place to keep them is in the original carton! I apply the liquid clay with a
dedicated brush; one used only for liquid clay. As it does not dry, I don't
clean the brush after use. Instead, I wipe off most of the excess from the
brush and put it in a small zip lock bag to keep it clean of dryer lint and
dust. It can be cleaned with alcohol when needed.
The eggs are easier to handle if I put them on a bamboo skewer prior to
applying the
liquid clay, and I bake the eggs in a pan while suspended on
these by letting the ends of the skewers rest on the sides of the pans. This
is also the best way to handle them for many kinds of decoration. Cookie
cutters of all shapes and sizes can be used on sheets of clay that are either
impressed with textures or with slices of millefiori cane work. My aStore at
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Place
a blown egg on a bamboo skewer for ease in handling, and cover it completely
with a thin coat of liquid polymer clay. Apply evenly and make sure there are no drips. It is better to build up
thin layers of the clay. Allow the liquid to settle and wipe off any drips
that occur. Suspend the egg on the skewer between the sides of your baking pan and bake
at the manufacturers specified temperature for ten minutes.
Remove and allow to cool, and repeat for a second layer. If desired coat
again for a third layer, but two layers is often sufficient with if you handle
the eggs carefully. The egg shown above has had two coats of clear TLS
baked onto it. Then cutouts of blue clay were applied leaving some spaces
open. After an additional baking to harden the blue cutouts, liquid clay was
applied as an adhesive, and small glass balls and a cabochon were added and
baked into place.
The
liquid gold and silver TLS can also be mixed together and thinned with an
equal amount of the clear to give a delicate flesh tone for making dolls-head
eggs. The ones shown here all started as white eggs, but now have a shimmery
tanned look as well as greater strength.
The baked TLS gives a "tooth" or slightly roughened surface to
the egg that allows the raw clay overlaid to stick very nicely.
It also makes a wonderful surface for drawing with pen and ink. Features
have been colored in with acrylic paints or colored pencils on the egg ladies
seen here; their hair is an additional layer of liquid polymer clay.
The one at right has a polymer clay millefiore "babushka" and a
beaded tassel.
Click here
for a how-to on decorating eggs with the cutaway filigree technique.
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are held by the artist
Copyright©1995-2010 Sarajane Helm
Reproduction without permission is
a violation of copyright law
