Puffy paint is so easy to make and it’s SO MUCH FUN to paint with! It has the coolest, puffy texture that really pops off the page!
RELATED: String Painting
Puffy Paint
All you need is 3 simple ingredients – shaving cream, white glue and food colouring. And in less than 5 minutes you can make super fun, super simple diy puffy paint!
Now that the girls are home for the summer, we’ve been on the hunt for fun and easy crafts to help fill the long summer days. And homemade puffy paint was such a fun experiment for us to try. It ended up with the coolest texture!
In my opinion, this stuff is fool proof. Even if you don’t measure the exact amounts when you make it, you still end up with a really neat 3 dimensional texture!
Check out our video on How to Make Puffy Paint:
*Note: Scroll down for the step-by-step photo tutorial.
Here’s even more fun things you can make with shaving cream:
Puffy Paint Ingredients:
The affiliate links below will take you to products on Amazon that are similar to the supplies we used to make this craft. I love that you only need 3 simple ingredients:
I used Barbasol shaving cream from the dollar store, but I’m sure any type would work. And I bought a big bottle of generic white glue from Walmart.
How do you make puffy paint?
Mix equal amounts of shaving cream and white glue until you have the texture you want. (You can Jump to Recipe at the bottom for the printable recipe.)
Since I wanted to make a rainbow, we made lots of colours and even made a bowl of plain white for the puffy clouds. As far as painted clouds go, you really can’t get a better cloud texture than this!
What does it look like when it dries?
The puffy paint will loose some of it’s height when it dries, but you’re still left with a super fun 3D texture. And then when it dried, the colours got way darker.
After it dried, the girls kept wanting to poke it with their fingers to feel the texture. None of us could resist the cool foaminess!
How long does DIY puffy paint last?
Homemade puffy paint should be used the same day you make it. Shaving cream loses it’s puffy texture by the next day so if you store it, you’ll basically be left with runny glue.
How long do the paintings made with DIY puffy paint last?
Your paintings should stay pretty fluffy for about a day. After the paintings dry completely, they start to flatten out a little.
Our paintings still had a really fun puffy texture 3 days later, but they weren’t popping off the page as much as on the first day.
Puffy Paint Recipe
This homemade puffy paint was such a fun and simple craft for the kids to do! With three simple ingredients, you can keep them entertained for hours!
How to Make Puffy Paint
Equipment
- Straw or popsicle stick
Materials
- 1/4 cup White glue (any brand)
- 1/4 cup Shaving cream (approximately)
- food coloring
Instructions
- Pour approximately 1/4 cup of white glue into a small bowl or container.
- Add an equal amount of shaving cream to the bowl. Just guess with the amount rather than measuring exactly. It will still work.
- Add a few drops of food colouring to the mixture. Keep in mind, that as the puffy paint dries, the colour will get darker, so don’t be too worried if it looks too light at this point. I added about 10 to 15 drops of food colouring into each of our colours.
- I really didn’t want this stuff on our kitchen spoons, so I used straws to stir them all up. A stir stick or popsicle stick would work well too.
- Repeat the process for as many colours as you’d like. I’m not sure what I did differently to the pink puffy paint below, but it looks like it has a better texture compared to the others. I think it had more glue in it?
- Use a regular paint brush to add paint onto a piece of printer paper. You’ll need to add a generous amount of puffy paint to your brush and "dab" rather than "spread".
Notes
Seriously though, aren’t those clouds amazing?!
After we finished the rainbows, we painted a bunch of balloons.
I started by drawing the strings with black pen, and then generously dolloped a big circle of paint on the end of each string to make the balloons.
When it dried, it had the coolest spongy texture.
This is what it looked like a couple hours later. Still lots of depth!
My girls loved it. They loved mixing all the colours and experimenting with how it looked on different colours of construction paper. The effect was pretty cool on black paper!
I’m definitely going to try adding more glue the next time I make this paint. I’m really curious to see how it changes the texture!
This post was originally published on July 15, 2015.
Here are even more shaving cream activities to try:
Shaving Cream Rain Cloud Experiment
Our book Low-Mess Crafts for Kids is loaded with 72 fun and simple craft ideas for kids! The projects are fun, easy and most importantly low-mess, so the clean up is simple!
Where to buy:
You can purchase Low-Mess Crafts for Kids from Amazon, or wherever books are sold:
Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Books- A- Million | Indiebound | Indigo | Amazon Canada
Gina Marie says
I am always looking for something fun and different that I can do with my kiddos! Love this! Thanks so much for sharing!
Julie @ Logger's Wife says
I had no idea that puffy paint was so easy to make! Pinned so I can’t find it again later. 🙂 (visiting from WFMW)
Hailey says
Thanks for the amazing way showing us how to make expecive paint and it onl costs like a few $$
amy davis says
This is awesome! Thank you for this! I like doing easy crafts with my nieces and nephews. They will love this!
Joybee says
This is cool. I’m pinning this for my nephews…fun craft.
Lavender Sky says
Can I use acrylic paint instead of food colouring? Will it work?
Debbie @ One Little Project says
It depends how concentrated the acrylic paint is? If it takes a ton of paint to get the right colour, then it could mess up the consistency. I’ve never tried with acrylic, so I can’t say for sure. If you do try, let us know!
Lavender Sky says
oh thanks! sure i will=)
Sharon Jermy says
Would this work with squirty cream rather than shaving foam? (For my younger children who will try and eat it!)
Debbie @ One Little Project says
I haven’t tried that, but I doubt it would work very well. But with kids, it’s about the process, so if you make a mess with squirty cream and the kids have fun with it, then go for it!
Kyona Pitchers says
This is fantastic! How long would you say they last and stay fluffy? thanks!
Debbie @ One Little Project says
They stay pretty fluffy for about a day, and then they start to flatten out. We only kept ours for about 3 days. The glue gives it a bit of texture, but definitely not as much as on the first day. Hope that helps!
d schnurr says
I used tempura dry paint and mix with a little water and some dish soap ( any kind of dish soap). I wonder if you could add shaving foam to the dry tempura paint and a little dish soap if that would work.(the dish soap is to protect the little ones clothes/ when clothes are washed, paint will wash out. I used this recipe when my children were young and now I use it for my Grandchildren
N says
Can i use puffy paint on cendelles too or there is another ideas
amanda says
how washable is it…or will it stain everything…we dont have a backyard so all our messy crafts happen inside so i have to be careful
Debbie @ One Little Project says
It’s made with food colouring, so yes, it could stain things. We did it at our kitchen table with a dollar store table cloth over top. I found it was a really easy clean up. But my kids (who were 3 and 5 at the time) aren’t the type of kids who get paint all over themselves, so it really depends how messy your kids are.