by Debbie Chapman
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Learning how to make squishies is SO COOL! These squeezable toys are all the rage, but did you know you can make them at home?! Use pourable foam to make your own slow rising squishy, and then decorate it with puffy fabric paint!
These squishies are so soft, and they have a great texture! This is a great craft for adults and kids to make together. Grown-ups should probably do all the mixing and pouring, and kids can take over when it comes time to decorate their homemade squishies.
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How to Make Squishies
Learn how to make squishies with our step by step photo and video tutorial. It's SO FUN to make and paint your own squishy fidget toy!
Author: Debbie Chapman
Materials:
Equipment:
3 Tongue depressors (or plastic spoons, for mixing)
Black Sharpie marker (for labeling)
Vinyl gloves (or rubber)
Check Out The Video Tutorial:
Looking for more fun crafts? Here's a few of our favourites:
Orbeez Stress Ball
Shrinky Dink Keychain
DIY Spinner Toy
Butter Slime
IMPORTANT:
Read all instructions one time before starting to make your squishies.
SAFETY FIRST:
Wear rubber or vinyl gloves while working with the Foam-It liquids. Be sure to read and follow the instructions from your Foam-It kit.
Instructions:
Step 1: Find what you need
Gather your supplies and materials.
Step 2: Label your cups and stir sticks
Use a marker to label the plastic cups. Write 'A' on one cup, 'B' on another, and 'MIX' on the third. Label the tongue depressors to match.
Step 3: Measure the two liquids
Stir the Part A liquid well with the tongue depressor marked A. Put cup A on a kitchen scale and tare it.
Measure out 1-1/2 ounces of solution A into cup A. (Confirm the exact amount with your Foam-It kit instructions).
Stir liquid B well with the B stir stick. Measure out 3 ounces of solution B. (Confirm the exact amount with your Foam-It kit instructions).
Step 4: Combine the liquids and pour into the mold
Pour cup A's contents into the mix cup, making sure to use stir stick A to scrape out all of the liquid.
Pour cup B into the mix cup, again scraping out all the liquid. Make sure to do this quickly, since the chemical reaction will begin as soon as the two liquids touch.
Use the Mix stir stick to stir the two liquids together. Stir for about 20 seconds, making sure the liquids are well combined.
Immediately pour the mixture into the silicone mold, covering only the bottoms of each mold.
Watch as the squishies grow before your eyes. The solution will expand to 15 times its size!
Leave the squishies to set in the molds for 2 hours.
Step 5: Paint the squishies
Once the squishies have set you can remove them from the molds. They should peel away from the silicone easily.
Use thin lines of puffy fabric paint to create an outline for the donut's icing.
Add thicker lines of paint inside the lines and use a paintbrush to spread it evenly.
Allow paint to dry for 1 hour.
Add a thin glaze line or sprinkles with a different colour of puffy paint.
Allow the paint to dry overnight. Make sure the paint is completely dry before playing with the squishy.
Your DIY squishies are complete!
Helpful Tips:
- Once opened, the materials in the Foam-It kit only last about 2 days. More on that below.
- Be sure to read the safety instructions on the Foam-It kit! The manufacturer advises you to wear long sleeves, safety glasses, and rubber or vinyl gloves while handling the Foam-It liquids. Working in a room with good ventilation is also recommended.
- There’s a bit of a learning curve when it comes to how much mixture to put into the silicone molds. Not enough, and the squishy won’t rise enough. Too much and the mold will overflow. It’s okay if your first pours aren’t perfect – just try again and you’ll figure out exactly how much to add!
What ingredients do you need to make squishies?
The squishies are made using a Foam-It! kit, which is pourable polyurethane foam. The mixture is poured into a silicone mold, and then it will expand and cure into a soft, flexible foam. Once the squishies are unmolded they’re painted with puffy fabric paint!
What molds work best to make a DIY squishy?
Silicone molds are a must for making squishies! We recommend simple molds like donut pans, cupcake liners, or a cake slice mold. Even plastic cups work well as molds (when the foam rises out of the cup it looks like a cupcake!).
Any molds with simple, clean lines will work the best, since the mixture rises like a baked good. We tried more detailed butterfly and dragon molds, but the smaller, detailed areas didn’t turn out well.
We don’t recommend using the mold for food after making squishies in it.
How many squishies can you make with this kit?
We made about 20 squishies and there is still a LOT of liquid left in the bottles. You could probably make between 80 and 100 squishies with this one kit, depending on how big the squishies are.
How long do the foam liquids last?
We would recommend using up the foam kit within a day or two of opening the bottles. The paperwork with the kit says that it has a “limited shelf life” and that it should be used “as soon as possible”.
We made different batches of squishies over a week and each batch got progressively worse. The first donuts are still incredibly soft and squishable, while the later batches either collapsed or didn’t stay soft.
What paint works best to decorate squishies?
Puffy fabric paint adds such a fun shine and texture to the donut squishies! You can also apply thin layers of acrylic paint to the squishies, but it will be matte and won’t have any dimension to it.
How else can I make squishies?
If you don’t want to buy a Foam-It kit, here are a few other simple ways you can make squishies at home:
- Make a squishy stress ball from a balloon and fill it with foam makeup sponges.
- To make paper squishies, cut out 2 layers of paper and apply tape to the outside. Leave an opening and fill it with old pillow stuffing before taping it off.
- Carve a squishy from a memory foam block (an old memory foam pillow would be great for this!)
When you can make so many squishies from one kit, it becomes really inexpensive to make your own. It’s such a fun DIY craft, and painting the squishies would be a great birthday party activity!
Here’s even more fun craft ideas:
Orbeez Stress Ball
Shrinky Dink Keychain
DIY Spinner Toy
Butter Slime
Our bookLow-Mess Crafts for Kids is loaded with 72 fun and simple craft ideas for kids! The projects are fun, easy and most importantly low-mess, so the clean up is simple!
Where to buy:
You can purchase Low-Mess Crafts for Kids from Amazon, or wherever books are sold:
Amazon |Barnes and Noble | Books- A- Million | Indiebound |Indigo |Amazon Canada
More from One Little Project
About Debbie Chapman, the Author of this Post
I'm Debbie Chapman, founder of One Little Project and author of the book Low-Mess Crafts for Kids. I love creating fun and easy crafts and cooking up delicious recipes for my husband and 3 kids.
More by Debbie Chapman
Filed Under: Crafts for Adults, DIY, Just for Kids, Kids Crafts and ActivitiesTagged With: DIY toy, puffy paint, squishies, stress balls
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Sara says
I clicked on your link to the foam it kit and it specifically says not to use it to make squishies. Is this the brand you actually used?
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One Little Project says
Hi Sara, do you know where it says that? This is the brand that we used.
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Mo says
I’m excited to try this! Do you remember how long the squishies lasted for? Were they still good several months later for example?
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One Little Project says
Hi Mo! I think they were definitely nice and squishy for a while. We actually just threw them out because they weren’t squishy anymore… so even though they still looked cute, they don’t “last” more than a year. But it’s hard to give an exact time frame – sorry!
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