no, part of it will turn hard and will be unable to create a necklace or charm
A dry polymer is one that is not in solution. they are used where moisture would create an issue. Sometimes dry polymer powder is added to cement so that when the cement is hydrated to make concrete, the dry polymer is hydrated at the same time. If a wet polymer, or polymer solution were used, it would react with the cement and make it unusable.
clay looks smooth and slimy.
Sand
It prefers dry air.
Yes Argon is a gas in dry air
Hope this helped! No....Polymer Clay and Reg. Clay are not the same. For One Polymer Clay can be 'cured' in your home oven where other clay need either air to dry them or a High Fire Kilm.
you can with polymer clay but not with air dry or other kinds
hobby craft has a range of clay, air hardening and normal. I'm guessing all arts and crafts shops should have clay.
you buy air dry clay and it drys in 10 secs by air
You don't bake air dry clay...so, no problem!
Air dry or kiln depending on the clay type
I would suggest any air dry clay because with polymer clay you would need to bake it and use tls instead of glue. You will need to wait longer for your decoden piece to dry but it's much safer than putting the thing you are goin to decoden in the oven.
As far as I know, Alex doesn't make a polymer clay (polymer clays must be baked to cure and hadren them). Alex does have a 16 color set of modeling clay those are also oil based like polymer clay, but have wax added to them (if you tried to bake a modeling clay, it would begin to *melt* rather than getting harder).Alex may also make colored air-dry clays, but not sure. That type dries in the air in about a day, and also shrinks somewhat the drying can be speeded up a bit by being put into a low temp oven for an hour or so, or in front of a fan, etc.That heat can't cause an air-dry clay to cure though the way it would a polymer clay.Air-dry clays will hadren if not kept in an air-tight container (after about a day), where polymer clays and modeling clays will not do that.So again, modeling clays can't be baked, polymer clays must be baked.Some brand names of polymer clays you might see around in the U.S. are Fimo, Sculpey, Premo, Cernit, Kato, etc . some brand names of different types of air-dry clays you might see around are Creative Paperclay, Play-Doh, Model Magic, Makins, Hearty, Celluclay, etc.HTH,Diane B.
It can be if you just believe it can. Magical mind powers.
Both types of clay are the same. You can use both types of clay to create things. I looked into this and found out that both dry up after a while if you want it to. If you want to paint the clay after it is dry is sort of a mystery to me. I absolutely know that after the crayola air dry clay drys you can definitely paint it. With other types of modeling clay, I am not so sure. I hope this helps.
You can't make polymer clay, you can make air dry clay, though.Ingredients2 cups flour1 cup salt1 cup hot water1 tablespoon vegetable oil (optional, for smoother texture)Mix the ClayCombine flour and salt in a large bowl.Add hot water (and optional oil if desired) and mix thoroughly.Let cool until comfortable to knead (about 5 minutes).Knead until smooth and pliable (about 6 minutes).
clay soil has tiny pieces very close together, it feels dry.