{"title":"How to Make Resin Earrings: Beginner DIY in 9 Easy Steps","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/resin-art/how-to-make-resin-earrings","category":{"slug":"resin-art","name":"Resin Art"},"creator":{"name":"Dezy Jewelry","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlNeQYtdurffZb4vJZEODw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkA0KWDIV7Y"},"tldr":"Make resin earrings at home in 9 easy steps. Beginner epoxy resin walkthrough with silicone molds, gold foil, and mica - styled, ready in 24 hours.","totalDurationSeconds":812,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["silicone earring molds (teardrop, square, diamond)","mixing cups","wooden stir sticks or popsicle sticks","jewelry pliers (round nose and flat nose)","small heat torch or lighter","nitrile gloves","respirator mask with chemical filter"],"materials":["two-part epoxy resin (1:1 ratio)","white acrylic paint","gold mica powder","loose gold foil flakes","earring hooks","jump rings","newspaper or parchment to protect the workspace"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Gather Materials and Set Up Safely","text":"Lay everything out on a newspaper or parchment-covered surface before you mix. You need two-part epoxy resin (parts A and B), silicone earring molds in your favorite shapes, white acrylic paint, gold mica powder, loose gold foil flakes, mixing cups, wooden stir sticks, jewelry pliers, earring hooks, and jump rings. A small heat torch or lighter helps clear bubbles later.Resin is genuinely toxic until cured. Put on nitrile gloves, a respirator mask with chemical filters (not a paper dust mask), and wear clothes you don't mind ruining. Open a window for cross-ventilation, and ideally run a small fan to pull fumes away from your face. Skipping the mask is the most common rookie mistake and it adds up over time."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Mix the Epoxy Resin","text":"Measure equal parts of resin A (the resin itself) and resin B (the hardener) into a clean mixing cup. The 1:1 ratio is what makes the chemistry work. Off-ratio mixes either stay sticky forever or cure brittle. Most beginner-friendly resins like JDiction are marked clearly so you can pour by volume without a scale.Stir slowly and steadily for about two minutes, scraping down the sides and bottom of the cup. Fast stirring whips in bubbles. Once it looks fully mixed and clear, let the cup rest for one to two minutes so trapped air can rise to the surface and pop on its own."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Divide Resin Into Color Cups","text":"Split the mixed resin into three smaller cups. You want roughly 50 percent of the batch in one cup for the white side, 50 percent in a second cup for the clear-with-foil side, and a very small amount - less than 1 percent - in a third tiny cup for the gold accent line that divides the two halves.This is not a precise science. Eyeball it. The gold accent only needs enough to dribble one thin line per earring, so a teaspoon-sized pour into the third cup is plenty. The other two should look about evenly split."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Tint the White Cup","text":"Shake your acrylic paint bottle thoroughly before opening - settled paint gives uneven color. Drop two or three drops into the first cup of resin and stir gently. Pull the stir stick up vertically and watch how the resin runs off. If you can still see through it, add another drop. You want fully opaque, milky white with no see-through.Don't go overboard on paint. Too much acrylic in resin makes the mix thick like cold honey and stops it from self-leveling in the mold. A few drops at a time, stirring between, gets you to opaque without overloading the chemistry."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Add Gold Foil to the Clear Cup","text":"Drop a small pinch of loose gold foil flakes into the second cup of clear resin. Tease them apart with the stir stick if they came out in clumps. You want the foil suspended in the clear resin with plenty of clear space between flakes so light still passes through.The instinct on the first pour is to pile in too much foil and end up with a solid gold patch. Resist it. Fewer flakes spread further once the resin pours into the mold, and a sparse spray of foil looks more delicate and expensive than a dense brick of metal."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Mix the Gold Mica Accent","text":"Sprinkle a pinch of gold mica powder into the tiny third cup. Stir until the resin looks like solid liquid metal - no clear epoxy showing through, no streaks of mica. You only need enough to draw one thin line per earring, so the cup should look like a teaspoon of melted gold paint by the time you finish stirring.Mica gives a metallic shimmer that flat acrylic paint can't match. The light catches the suspended pigment particles and gives the gold a depth that flat-color resin doesn't have. It is the single ingredient that makes the finished earrings read as expensive."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Pour the Layered Design Into the Mold","text":"Pour the clear-with-foil resin into the bottom of each mold cavity at a diagonal angle - covering about a third to half of the cavity. Then pour the white resin to fill most of the rest of the cavity, leaving a small ribbon of empty space between the white and the foil section. Don't fill the mold all the way - the gold accent in the next move will fill in the rest and raise the level.This is also where you batch your variants. Pour foil-at-bottom in one mold and foil-at-top in the next. Try a straight horizontal split in one and a diagonal in another. Same materials, four different looks coming out of the same pour session."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Drop the Gold Accent Line and Pop Bubbles","text":"Take the tiny cup of gold mica resin and dribble one thin line across the border between the white and the clear-foil halves. The line spreads on its own as the resin settles - you don't need to drag it. The gold creates a clean visual divider and adds a metallic shimmer right at the heart of the design.Now check for bubbles, especially near the molded hole at the top of each earring. Pass a small heat torch quickly over the surface (two or three seconds, kept moving) to release trapped air. If a stubborn bubble sits right next to the hole, drop a tiny dab of clear resin on top of it and torch again."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Cure, Demold, and Attach Hooks","text":"Leave the mold flat on a clean, level surface, dust-free, for the full cure time on your resin's instructions. Fast-cure resins like JDiction demold in four hours, but a full 24-hour cure gives a harder, glossier finish. Cover the mold lightly with a cardboard box to keep dust off the wet surface.Once cured, gently flex the silicone mold and pop each earring out. Pick whichever side you like best as the front - resin earrings have no \"wrong\" side, so the prettier swirl is the front. Open a jump ring with pliers, thread it through the molded hole and the earring hook, then close the ring. Repeat for the matching earring and you have a finished, store-shelf-quality pair ready to wear or gift."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-09T21:35:44.336Z","published":"2026-06-09T21:31:42.277Z","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."}