{"title":"How to Make Polymer Clay Earrings","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/pottery/how-to-make-polymer-clay-earrings","category":{"slug":"pottery","name":"Pottery"},"creator":{"name":"Heart Box Clayworks","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCv3RNEEiHUR6S49QSVIptVg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sK0ua-WB5vw"},"tldr":"Make your first pair of polymer clay earrings with this beginner guide. Pick the right clay, condition it, build a terrazzo slab, bake, and attach findings.","totalDurationSeconds":301,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["acrylic rolling pin","depth guide","pasta machine or clay machine","precision knife","long blade","metal clay cutters","3D-printed clay cutters","ceramic tile","conventional oven","electric drill or manual drill","jewelry pliers"],"materials":["Sculpey Premo polymer clay","Sculpey Souffle polymer clay","Cernit polymer clay","earring posts","jump rings (6 mm)","jump rings (7 mm)","earring hooks","baking paper","aluminum foil"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Pick a Clay Brand That Bakes Flexible","text":"Not every polymer clay survives daily wear. For earrings you want something that flexes a little after baking instead of snapping. Sculpey Premo and Sculpey Souffle are the workhorse picks - easy to condition, easy to find, and forgiving once baked. Cernit is another solid choice for jewelry and comes in fun lines like Number One, Nature, and Opaline.One brand to skip: Sculpey III. It is fine for figurines but turns brittle once cured, so a single drop on a hard floor will crack your earring."},{"number":2,"title":"Gather Your Tools and Findings","text":"The starter kit is short. You need a way to roll the clay flat, a way to cut it, a surface to work on, and a way to attach hardware once the pieces are baked.For rolling, an acrylic rolling pin plus a depth guide gets you started; a pasta or clay machine speeds things up if you plan to make more than one pair. For cutting, you want a precision knife, a long blade, and a handful of metal or 3D-printed cutters. A ceramic tile doubles as both work surface and oven tray. For the findings, gather earring posts, jump rings (6 mm and 7 mm cover most styles), and a pair of jewelry pliers. A small electric or manual drill rounds it out."},{"number":3,"title":"Condition the Clay Until It Stops Cracking","text":"Straight from the packet, polymer clay is stiff. You have to work the air bubbles out and warm it up with your hands before it will roll smooth. This is called conditioning, and skipping it is why beginner pieces snap.Roll the clay back and forth under an acrylic roller, or feed it through a clay machine several passes. Every minute or so, fold a piece in half. If the fold splits or cracks, keep working. When the fold stays smooth, the clay is ready."},{"number":4,"title":"Roll a Slab and Build the Terrazzo","text":"Once your clay is conditioned, place it between the depth guides and roll it flat. The guides keep the slab a consistent thickness, which is what stops earrings from baking unevenly.For the terrazzo look in this demo, the white base sheet gets pressed with small chips of three accent colors. Scatter the chips across the slab, then roll over the top once more to flatten the chips into the surface. The result is a single smooth sheet with the speckled pattern frozen into it. You can riff on the same idea with any color combo."},{"number":5,"title":"Cut Your Earring Shapes","text":"Push your cutter straight down into the slab on the ceramic tile, then lift. Use a precision knife to lift away the excess clay around each shape so you do not warp the cut.Leaving the cut pieces on the tile means they slide straight into the oven without you touching them again. Moving wet clay shapes to a baking tray is where most beginners distort the outline."},{"number":6,"title":"Preheat and Bake at 130 C","text":"Set your oven to 130 C (266 F) and let it preheat fully before the clay goes in. The rule of thumb is 30 minutes of baking per 6 mm of thickness. Most earrings come out around 3 mm thick, so 30 minutes covers them with margin.If you are baking on a tile, slide the tile straight in. If you are using a baking tray instead, tent a piece of aluminum foil over the pieces. The foil buffers any temperature spike so a cheap oven's heating element does not scorch the top of your earrings."},{"number":7,"title":"Drill, Smooth, and Attach the Findings","text":"Let the baked pieces cool fully before you handle them - hot polymer clay flexes and stretches. Once cool, run a sanding sponge or fine-grit sandpaper around any rough edges to soften them.Drill a small hole near the top of each earring for a jump ring. Open the ring with your pliers, slip it through the hole, thread on an earring post or hook, and close the ring back up. Six and seven millimeter jump rings cover most setups. You have a finished pair."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-30T16:03:13.644Z","published":"2026-05-30T14:59:05.628Z","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."}