Have you ever wondered how to make Shrinky Dinks?  You know, shrinky dinks, the thin plastic that shrinks in the oven. To make DIY shrinky dinks you need to save your #6 plastic containers (like the clear containers from the salad bar).

shrinky dinks

DIY Shrinky Dinks

Save the whole container, even the textured sides, and bottoms. It all works and flattens out nicely.  The ridges on the sides give a nice space to color!  We burned up most of the afternoon making  DIY shrink plastic and used every bit of my large stash of #6 containers and were left wanting more! When your plastic runs out you might be interested in this huge list of kids crafts and activities, this summer bucket list and these free coloring pages. So many ideas to keep kids busy and engaged!

What is a Shrinky Dink?

Shrinky Dinks are children’s activity that was hugely popular in the 80’s.  Special plastic sheets when heated in an oven, shrink to small hard pieces without altering their color or shape.

How do you make Shrinky Dinks?

You can purchase the special plastic sheets (affiliate link) and follow manufacturer instructions. Typically, shrinky dink plastic if first colored on with permanent markers or colored pencils. Next cut out the shapes and bake at 325 degrees Fahrenheit for about 1-3 minutes. At first, the Shrinky Dinks will curl up, but then they will flatten back out. Once they flatten back out, bake for 30 more seconds.

Homemade Shrinky Dinks Supplies

It is really an easy activity. All you need is:

  • permanent markers
  • regular hole punch
  • #6 plastic
  • oven
  • cookie sheet covered with aluminum foil or parchment paper
  • scissors to cut the plastic

How to make Shrinky Dinks

Here is the shrinky dink instruction you need!  Cut a shape out of the plastic (plastic shrinks about 1/3 of the original size). Our 2″ circle became about 3/4″ when shrunk.

shrinky dinks

Color one side of the shape with a permanent marker.  The color becomes more intense once it shrinks. If you are wanting to attach your shape to something don’t forget to punch a hole before placing in the oven.

Place the plastic on a thin cookie sheet (not the insulated type) covered with parchment paper or aluminum foil. Bake plastic at 350 degrees for 2- 3 minutes. Each oven is different so watch closely. You will see the plastic curl up and then it will flatten back out. It does give off some fumes so we left a window open for ventilation!

How to make Shrinky Dinks tutorial

We added a jump ring to some of our shapes and strung on cording along with beads to make necklaces.

Homemade Shrinky Dinks Supplies

Some of the small shapes we placed on id wire rings along with some beads to make beverage markers.

Ball started as a 2″ circle, finished size was about 3/4″
Tag started 3″ long by 1 3/4″ wide, finished size was about 1 1/4″ long by just under 3/4″ wide

What is a Shrinky Dink?

On a larger shaped tag (starting size 4″ long by 2 3/4″ wide) we placed a clip so it could be a zipper pull. Punch two holes side by side to make the finished hole big enough for the clip. I think these zipper pulls would  make the cutest Valentine’s -attach a note that says “You pull at my heart!”

What is a Shrinky Dink

How do you make a shrinky dink ring?

Then we really got rolling and made rings.  Our shrinky dink rings are a bit sloppy but we are still wearing them. It took some trial and error to find the right size. For my size, I started with a strip 5″ long by about 1″ to 1 1/2″ wide. Pull it immediately from the oven and quickly while it is still very hot wrap it around a Chap-stick tube. My son needed to make his 5 1/2 inches long and I (an adult must do this part–it is hot and you must work fast!) wrapped it around a child’s chunky marker. If you make a mistake and get a miss-shaped ring or it is too long just send it back into the oven. Once it is warm it can be trimmed with scissors, it will also flatten back out and you can give it another go. For more information on making shrinky dink rings you will want to visit Planet June. Here rings are lovely!

How do you make a shrinky dink ring

After we had used every piece of plastic my son said ———bracelets!  We could make bracelets. So we are now saving more plastic!

Homemade Shrinky Dinks Tips:

  • I was able to use a regular ink pad and stamp designs on the plain plastic with great results!
  • Look for the #6 stamp on the bottom of the clear containers
  • #6 – PS: polystyrene is used in takeout food containers. It has been found to leach styrene–a neurotoxin and possible human carcinogen–and has been banned in cities like Portland, Ore. and San Francisco.  Okay, so there is a downside to the craft! Using a toaster oven outside might be the best thing to do!
  • I remember my grandmother melting white Styrofoam cups in the oven enough to make them look like hats. I think she did something for Mother’s Day with them!
  • I did think the melting plastic left a lingering odor in my oven. Before using my oven for food I turned it on to 400 degrees and let it bake for about 20 minutes to get rid of the smell. Again, a small toaster oven reserved for craft projects and used in a well-ventilated area (like outside) is the safest way to make homemade shrinky dinks!

What do you use to color on Shrinky Drink Plastic?

To color the recycled plastic, it is best to use sharpie permanent markers. The colors darken as the plastic shrinks. Colored pencils work great on store bought sheets. The commercial sheets have a rough surface.   Clear smooth sheets or the recycled #6 plastic will need to be sanded lightly in order for the color stick onto the plastic.

I would love to keep you fully stocked with creative ideas, yummy recipes, fun crafts, and loads of free printables. Subscribe to Skip to my Lou to get new ideas delivered to your inbox. Follow me on Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, and Instagram for all my latest updates.


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Comments

  1. To Chloe, when you pull them from the oven lay them on a flat counter and put a heavy book on top while they are still warm. They will flatten and cool in about a minute.

  2. Mine didn’t flatten back out again. What did I do wrong? I used clear #6, put it in a metal baking tray (it’s quite deep, it that a problem?) covered in tin foil and baked it at 180C for 3 minutes. Does it always flatten out again?

  3. This is awesome

    We don’t get shrinky dinks too often in South Africa – so this is an awesome alternative
    The baking in the oven part, I assume its 300F? not C?

    Just doubly checking!!!

    Thx again

  4. Not sure what I am doing wrong. My daughters and I tried this a couple years ago and decided to try it again today and the same thing happened both times: the plastic never flattens back out (after it begins to warp while shrinking in the oven), so they come out shaped as domes, the corners folded in on itself, or looking like a hill country. I am wondering if we are cutting our plastic too large. The pieces were going to be name tags for their lunch boxes and backpacks, so the pre-shrunk size of plastic was probably around 4×7. Anyone know if the plastic needs to be cut smaller????

  5. Hi I tried this, but mine didn’t flatten out, they just curled. The more circular ones also became oblong, like a long thin oval. Any suggestions?

  6. Ok, I love the idea, but mine are melting really wierd. The proportions are really strange. My circles are turning into ovals! Please help!!!

  7. When I was younger we used to put crisp packets in the oven and watch them shrink to about 1/8th of their original size. I was fascinated. Then ‘proper’ shrinkies came out but that took the fun out of it. I will definitely give this a try with my boy, would be great to make Xmas decorations.

  8. I tried SEVERAL times today to make things (even a simple circle) and every single time the plastic would curl or become horribly misshapen. I tried raising the temp, lowering the temp leaving it in longer ( even up to 10 minutes one time) and not one item turned out even remotely close to the original shape. What am i doing wrong? I made sure I got #6 plastic, I used parchment paper on the cookie sheet. I don’t know what went wrong. Anyone else have these problems? Any solutions??

  9. I have used sharpie markers, and they did not rub off with normal use.

    I too am concerned about the fumes thing, so I just don’t do it very often. 😉

  10. I had a leftover salad container and wanted to try this, but I looked on the bottom and it was #1, not #6. I did it anyway just for kicks, and it did not work. The plastic bent and curled, and turned opaque white. Thought others might be curious too and could learn from my experiment!

  11. Thank you, I have just been looking for information about this subject for ages and yours is the greatest I’ve discovered till now. But, what in regards to the bottom line? Are you positive in regards to the source?

  12. So if this type of plastic is known for leaching styrene…does anyone not worry about that fact that usually happens when polysterene (aka plastic #6) is heated. If you are putting this plastic in the oven, etc., are you not creating the perfect environment to contaminate your home with these scary chemicals?

    It sounds like a cool idea…just worried about the chemical reaction that is actually taking place here.

    Thanks!

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