{"title":"How to Make a Marbled Polymer Clay Dish With Gold Leaf Edge","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/pottery/how-to-make-a-marbled-polymer-clay-dish","category":{"slug":"pottery","name":"Pottery"},"creator":{"name":"Alisa Hopper","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClKE7T2ZH5KaX5LTYDicfMQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPNcwOYN-kg"},"tldr":"Make a marbled polymer clay jewelry dish with a gold-leaf rim. Roll, twist, drape over an oven-safe bowl, bake at 275, and brush gold on the edge.","totalDurationSeconds":310,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Pasta machine or acrylic roller","Oven-safe bowl or pyrex measuring cup (for draping)","Baking sheet or tile","Baking scraper","Small firm synthetic paintbrush","Standard home oven"],"materials":["Polymer clay - 3 to 4 colors (translucent, white, pink, gold)","Synthetic gold leaf sheets","Glitter clay (optional, for shimmer)","Satin clay glaze","Liquid gold leaf paint"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Roll Out Each Clay Color","text":"Condition each color of polymer clay in your hands until it's soft and workable, then roll each one out into a thin even sheet. A pasta machine gives you the most consistent thickness, but an acrylic roller or wooden rolling pin works too.Aim for roughly an eighth of an inch thick. Inconsistent thickness shows up later as muddy marbling, so this is worth a minute of care. Lay the sheets out on your work mat so you can see your color palette before you start blending."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Roll Gold Leaf Into the Translucent Clay","text":"Lay synthetic gold leaf sheets onto a piece of translucent clay. Keep the leaf in its plastic bag until the second you use it - any breath of wind sends it everywhere, and dry hands matter because moisture makes it stick to skin.Roll the leaf into the clay with your pasta machine or roller. The more passes you do, the smaller the flakes get and the deeper they sink in. Once baked, those flakes glint through the surface instead of sitting on top."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Twist and Marble the Colors","text":"Roll each color into a thick rope, lay the ropes side by side, and twist them together. Twist again the opposite direction. Then flatten the twisted bundle with your roller into a single marbled sheet.Use as many colors as you want. The more passes you make with the roller, the more the colors blend into each other - so stop sooner if you want bold, distinct swirls. Check both sides of the sheet before you pick a winner; the patterns rarely match."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Tear and Reassemble for Variation","text":"Once you have a marbled sheet you like, tear it into chunks and rearrange the pieces. Press them back together, then roll once more. This shifts the pattern unpredictably - new lines appear, others soften.Add a few specks of glitter clay here if you want extra shimmer. Roll it in just enough to embed the flakes; over-rolling smears the glitter into a flat haze. Keep your scraps - they marble together into a base layer for the next dish."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Drape Over an Oven-Safe Bowl","text":"Pick an oven-safe form: the outside of a Pyrex measuring cup, the inside of a small ceramic bowl, or a glass measuring cup all work. The form shapes your dish, so pick something the size and depth you want.Lay your marbled sheet over the upside-down bowl and press down all the way around the rim. Push out any air bubbles trapped between the clay and the bowl, or they expand in the oven and crack the surface."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Bake at 275, Then Glaze","text":"Bake the bowl-and-clay together at 275 degrees Fahrenheit for 45 minutes. Let everything cool fully before lifting the dish off the form - polymer clay is brittle while hot. A gentle tap upside down on your palm usually pops it loose.When cool, brush a thin coat of satin glaze on the bottom, let it dry, then glaze the top. Satin gives a soft sheen without the plastic look of high gloss. This step also seals the surface before the gold leaf goes on the rim."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Brush Liquid Gold Leaf on the Edge","text":"Open your liquid gold leaf paint and load a small firm synthetic brush. Pull the brush along the rim of the dish in short overlapping strokes. The organic edge of the clay gives you a raw, gilded look - perfect imperfection.Liquid gold leaf takes a couple of hours to set and a full overnight to cure. Don't stack or wrap the dishes until they're completely dry. Once cured, the gold edge is durable and resists chipping."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-30T15:43:14.214Z","published":"2026-05-30T14:58:34.655Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}