Playdough is like a squishy, stretchy friend you can mold into anything you imagine.
Playdough is made from ingredients that stick together and stay soft, so when you press it, roll it, or pull it, it changes shape but doesn’t break. It feels a bit like clay, but it’s not as hard, more like the inside of a cookie dough ball before it goes into the oven.
How Playdough Works
When you push your hands into playdough, it moves and stays smooth, just like how flour feels when you make cookies. You can squish it flat or twist it into long ropes, and if you want, you can even roll it into balls and throw them (though they won’t bounce back like a ball).
What You Can Make
With playdough, you can build houses, cars, animals, or even your own wild imaginary creatures. It’s like having a pile of soft clay that never gets tired of being shaped, no matter how many times you make and break things.
Playdough is just fun stuff that grows with your imagination!
Examples
- A teacher uses playdough to help students learn about shapes and numbers.
- A parent makes a fun animal with playdough and shows it to their child.
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See also
- How Boredom Sparks Creative Ideas?
- How boredom actually makes us more creative | YTartschool?
- How Do Artists See the World Differently?
- How Does Copyright Basics: Crash Course Intellectual Property #2 Work?
- How Does Art, Madness Work?