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Creating Silky Play

Dough
Part 2

Knead in some glitter and/or food coloring, if desired. How much glitter and
food coloring you use depends on how much play dough you are making. If you
made a little bit of play dough, a sprinkle of glitter and a drop of food
coloring will be plenty. If you made a lot of play dough, try a teaspoon of
glitter and 1 to 3 drops of food coloring.Extra-fine glitter will look much nicer
than the regular chunky kind, but you can use whatever you want.
 If your conditioner is already colored, be aware that the food coloring may
mix with it to create a new color. It would be best to use the same color and
get brighter play dough.
 Play with the play dough, then discard it when it dries up. Because this
recipe is very simple, the play dough will not last very long. It may start
drying up after the first time that you use it. If it is still wet when you are
done playing with it, you can put it into a sealed containe

Mix everything together with a spoon or rubber spatula. Scrape the sides of
the bowl often so that all of the cornstarch goes into the conditioner. If the
play dough sticks to the spoon too much, add 1 teaspoon of cornstarch. If the
play dough is too crumbly, add 1 teaspoon of conditioner
 Pour some cornstarch onto a clean counter. How much cornstarch you use is
up to you. The measurement doesn't have to be exact, but ½ cup (65 grams)
is a good place to start.[7]If you can't find cornstarch, look for cornflour
instead. It's the same thing, but with a different name.

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