Polymer Clay Canes Tutorial
Polymer Clay Canes Tutorial
Polymer clay is used worldwide by everyone from children and hobbyists to professional artists and filmmakers. This oven-bake modeling material is made from a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and plastic base and includes coloring agents, polymers, resins and fillers. If you're searching for the perfect material for your next bead or jewelry project, consider making polymer clay canes! You can also use slices from canes for objects like buttons or for covering home decor items.
What Is a Polymer Clay Cane?
Polymer clay canes are rods of polymer clay of two or more colors. These rods or logs are made with a design that runs the entire length of the log. If you cross-section or slice the rod at one point, you'll see a two-dimensional pattern. To reduce a cane, all you have to do is squeeze or compress the log you then have to roll them down. Doing this will decrease the size of the diameter as well as the design.
This tutorial includes simple polymer clay cane ideas such as The Speckle Cane, The Checkerboard Cane, The Jellyroll Cane and The Pinwheel Cane. Each polymer cane featured in our tutorial below has been formed into a square cane — this uniform shape makes it simpler to use clay canes together in intricate patterns.
Types of Clay Canes
There are hundreds of traditional cane designs out there. To help you get an idea of the different types, we've compiled a list of standard polymer clay designs:
- Round kaleidoscope cane
- Kaleidoscope cane
- Butterfly cane
- Flower cane
- Leaf cane
- Retro cane
- Jellyroll cane
- Flame cane
- Bullseye cane
Contact Sculpey® for More Information About Your Polymer Cane Creations
We want to make your polymer clay journey as enjoyable and straightforward as possible. That's why we've included tutorials such as The Jellyroll Cane and The Checkerboard Cane. Knowledge of these basic canes will serve as building blocks for other, more complex projects.
Enjoy crafting canes for a rewarding and useful experience. Browse our polymer clay selection or reach out to us today if you have any questions about our simple polymer clay cane tutorial.
Remember the Windows XP operating system? You can work with it online at GeekPrank and trick your friends.
VIDEO TUTORIALS
Polymer clay is used worldwide by everyone from children and hobbyists to professional artists and filmmakers. This oven-bake modeling material is made from a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and plastic base and includes coloring agents, polymers, resins and fillers. If you're searching for the perfect material for your next bead or jewelry project, consider making polymer clay canes! You can also use slices from canes for objects like buttons or for covering home decor items.
What Is a Polymer Clay Cane?
Polymer clay canes are rods of polymer clay of two or more colors. These rods or logs are made with a design that runs the entire length of the log. If you cross-section or slice the rod at one point, you'll see a two-dimensional pattern. To reduce a cane, all you have to do is squeeze or compress the log you then have to roll them down. Doing this will decrease the size of the diameter as well as the design.
This tutorial includes simple polymer clay cane ideas such as The Speckle Cane, The Checkerboard Cane, The Jellyroll Cane and The Pinwheel Cane. Each polymer cane featured in our tutorial below has been formed into a square cane — this uniform shape makes it simpler to use clay canes together in intricate patterns.
Types of Clay Canes
There are hundreds of traditional cane designs out there. To help you get an idea of the different types, we've compiled a list of standard polymer clay designs:
- Round kaleidoscope cane
- Kaleidoscope cane
- Butterfly cane
- Flower cane
- Leaf cane
- Retro cane
- Jellyroll cane
- Flame cane
- Bullseye cane
Contact Sculpey® for More Information About Your Polymer Cane Creations
We want to make your polymer clay journey as enjoyable and straightforward as possible. That's why we've included tutorials such as The Jellyroll Cane and The Checkerboard Cane. Knowledge of these basic canes will serve as building blocks for other, more complex projects.
Enjoy crafting canes for a rewarding and useful experience. Browse our polymer clay selection or reach out to us today if you have any questions about our simple polymer clay cane tutorial.
Remember the Windows XP operating system? You can work with it online at GeekPrank and trick your friends.
VIDEO TUTORIALS

The Speckle Cane
This is probably the easiest cane achieve. Making this cane first will teach you the foundational technique for making rods of equal size and length. Any colors will work however the Speckle Cane lends itself nicely to a monochromatic color scheme.
The Checkerboard Cane
This looks great in two colors which contrast each other. Try this cane using a light and a dark color or two colors which are opposites.
The Jellyroll Cane
This cane easy and is a foundational part of making many other complex canes. It requires you to make sheets of clay instead of rods. This cane will start out circular but again for these projects, we'll turn it into a square cane. Like the Checkerboard Cane, the Jellyroll is most outstanding when you use either light and dark or opposite color combinations.
The Pinwheel Cane
This cane starts out with basically the same structure as the Speckle Cane using rods of equal proportions. The Pinwheel Cane will look great with any three colors, but I like it best with the lightest color in the middle. The Pinwheel Cane can also be made with more sides. For this instruction I used only four sides so that the cane lends itself well to the square shape.
The Speckle Cane
This is probably the easiest cane achieve. Making this cane first will teach you the foundational technique for making rods of equal size and length. Any colors will work however the Speckle Cane lends itself nicely to a monochromatic color scheme.
The Checkerboard Cane
This looks great in two colors which contrast each other. Try this cane using a light and a dark color or two colors which are opposites.
The Jellyroll Cane
This cane easy and is a foundational part of making many other complex canes. It requires you to make sheets of clay instead of rods. This cane will start out circular but again for these projects, we'll turn it into a square cane. Like the Checkerboard Cane, the Jellyroll is most outstanding when you use either light and dark or opposite color combinations.
The Pinwheel Cane
This cane starts out with basically the same structure as the Speckle Cane using rods of equal proportions. The Pinwheel Cane will look great with any three colors, but I like it best with the lightest color in the middle. The Pinwheel Cane can also be made with more sides. For this instruction I used only four sides so that the cane lends itself well to the square shape.