Crafts For Toddlers – Clay Play Activities

Clay Play can be a wonderful craft activity for toddlers. Clay activities help develop important fine motor movements children need. In this blog post, I will share my expertise on how to introduce clay, suitable clay materials, and how to start beginner clay activities. Crafts for toddlers can start with simple clay play activities.

Why is Clay Play Beneficial?

Playing with clay helps build strong neural connections essential for brain development. Working with their hands at an early age improves a toddler’s memory by developing implicit memory.

Clay play also strengthens the muscles in their fingers, hands, and arms through fine motor movements. This helps toddlers with everyday tasks like feeding themselves, dressing, or handling small objects while playing or building.

Introducing clay play is a wonderful way to exercise your toddler’s muscles and prepare them for practical life skills.

Best types of clay

There are four types of clays that I recommend for toddlers:

These types of clays are easy for toddlers to manipulate. They are malleable and suitable for changing, squeezing, and transforming into playful forms.

Pottery Earth Clay – is fun and messy, I recommended for outdoor use. It turns hard after air drying overnight.

Plasticine clay – can be used indoors and is made from wax and pigments that dose not harden. This craft clay is suitable for multiple uses and will not dry out.

Air Dry Clay – will harden overnight, and you can paint it after it dries out. You can find air dry from various brands such as Crayola Model Magic.

Homemade Play Dough – You can make this by mixing flour, water, salt and food coloring. This craft clay can be baked to harden. You can find many How to Make Play Dough – Easy No Cook Recipe videos online or on youtube.

clay play with toddlers.

Beginner Activities for First Time Clay Play

Start by introducing toddlers to clay activities with minimal set-ups. Begin with just clay, then gradually add clay tools, cookie cutters and rolling pins. Introduce how to press and poke fun objects into the clay. My best tip is to start small and simple. The first time – only provide clay, then add one tool. As a follow-up activity introduce how to press embellishments into the clay. So start with clay play first, then gradually add more tools and hand movement complexity.

Crafts For Toddlers - Clay Play Activities, clay inside a wooden bowl

Advantages of Tactile Clay Learning

It’s crucial for toddlers to have ample tactile experiences early. Tactile learning allows toddlers to feel with their hands, sending unique neural information to their brain. You can gain further insights into this topic by reading my book, The Way Children Make Art (Order Here). I share how children sensorily process tactile movements cognitively through art activities.

If you’re excited to start teaching clay play, my Clay Play book includes fun ideas to do with clay and set up. You can also find various clay modeling kits suitable for toddlers ororder my sequential clay modeling curriculum at my website.

Remember to take baby steps and start small so that you can manage the mess when introducing your toddlers to clay play. Gradually, they will learn to love clay play!

Order Clay Play Book Here

arts and craft book by Spramani Elaun

Spramani’s Books

Teach children visual arts

Curriculum For Children

Get step-by-step art curriculum to teach visual arts. Check out our 4 art curriculums:
Painting
Drawing
Color Theory
Clay Modeling

All rights reserved © 2024, Nature of Art®

No part of this blog may be used or be reproduced in any manner whatsoever including reproducing, publishing, performing, and making any adaptions of the work – including translation into another foreign language without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Nature of Art® Publishing P.O. Box 443 Solana Beach, California 92075.

How Clay Modeling Can Reduce Stress

clay modeling

Tactile Art-Making Is Beneficial for Stress Relief

Over my twenty years of naturalistic art observations, I’ve witnessed tactile art projects like clay modeling lead kids into relaxed states of mind time and time again. I’ve seen stressed children come into my classroom and quickly be able to transition into a calm and relaxed state. As a result, allowing them to focus on their handiwork. Most art activities are multi-sensory engaging and can help children relax and work calmly.
Making art with your hands stimulates touch neural input, visual pathways communicate with both the left and right hemispheres of the brain. Therefore, auditory and smell sensory systems collect information all at once, entering an active multi-sensory learning state. In addition, making art modeling clay is high in visual-auditory connectivity in the brain. Strong connectivity occurs, and the child becomes intensely focused on their handiwork.


Children using their hands can be so engaged that other stress-related thoughts clear their minds, and they enter a state of flow. As a result, students can forget the stress-related emotions they were experiencing before entering a creative state of flow.
The electrical activity stimulated in the brain becomes a different type of action. Then, firing connections occur that allow children to focus only on their creative process.
Soon, a calming effect takes place because tactile cognitive processing is occurring as children form or manipulate objects with their hands. It’s good for children to develop good habits and activities during their sensitive periods so they can regulate their own relaxation early in life through creative handiwork. Consequently, I’ve coined the phrase “active multi-sensory learning” to explain this cognitive state.

Clay Modeling Activity Can Reduce Stress

Clay modeling can be a great way children can have active multi-sensory learning happen and reduce stress! I’ve been teaching these types of lessons for two decades with clay modeling activities and using a variety of clay mediums for multi-sensory learning. Also, the other important aspect of these types of lessons is that children love them and take to them well.
To illustrate, if you find a child fidgety, highly stressed, or exhibiting anxiety, I recommend you engage them in clay modeling activities. In addition, another tip I would recommend is dedicating a place to these art materials and making them easily available in your classroom, home, or school. Because of this, if you observe students with these persistent signals, follow your school protocols or seek professional therapists. Most importantly, do not try to treat children exhibiting trauma yourself unless you are a licensed therapist.

Basic Clay Modeling Steps:

  • Prepare a bowl with malleable clay in plastic baggies to keep moist.
  • Start with calming, kneading movements (a ceramic technique).
  • Encourage students to knead the clay for long period (5-10 minutes).
  • Allow students to transition into process-based exploration forms.
  • Do not give students complex instructions to follow.
  • Leave simple clay books or activity instructions nearby.

Recommended Clays to Buy:

  • Plasticine, non-hardening clay (Click to Buy)
  • Air-dry clay
  • Pottery earth clay
  • Pure beeswax modeling clay

Recommended Reading:

Clay Play – By Spramani Elaun (Click to Buy)

In this book, you’ll learn how to:

  • Support kids with simple fine-motor clay activities
  • Introduce kids to therapeutic play using clay modeling
  • Prepare clay-making environment kids to thrive in
  • Help kids overcome frustrations using modeling
  • Gather tools and supplies for clay play
  • Identify simple movements and forms best for early childhood

Recommended Curriculum to Follow:

Clay Modeling – Practice & Process Curriculum, 27 Sequential Lessons (Click to Buy)

Contact me if you’d like to learn more about teaching children art using Montessori methods.

Buy Clay Curriculum & Books Here

arts and craft book by Spramani Elaun

Spramani’s Books

Teach children visual arts

Curriculum For Children

Get step-by-step art curriculum to teach visual arts. Check out our 4 art curriculums:
Painting
Drawing
Color Theory
Clay Modeling

All rights reserved © 2024, Nature of Art®

No part of this blog may be used or be reproduced in any manner whatsoever including reproducing, publishing, performing, and making any adaptions of the work – including translation into another foreign language without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Nature of Art® Publishing P.O. Box 443 Solana Beach, California 92075.