Beautiful, Shiny…Dirt.


Bruce Gardner.

Bruce Gardner.

What’s not to love about playing with dirt, and even better, playing with mud? Most all of us have done that in our lives at some point, and had a great time, too. Those of us who still love to play in dirt often use gardening as an excuse. I had never heard of dorodango though, a common occupation of children in Japan. Then there’s hikaru dorodango, the art of making shiny mud balls! I know I’m going to do this, it’s just one of those things that you see, and right away, you’re running outside for dirt.

Hikaru dorodango experienced a resurgence and brand new popularity thanks to Professor Fumio Kayo of the Kyoto University of Education: SHINY MUD BALLS: Kyoto Professor Taps into the Essence of Play. I really need to come out from under my rock more often, I had no idea, and this just looks so amazingly cool and fun. Professor Kayo’s personal recipe is included in that article, along with his method:

How to Make Shiny Dorodango

1. Pack some mud into your hand, and squeeze out the water while forming a sphere.

2. Add some dry dirt to the outside and continue to gently shape the mud into a sphere.

3. When the mass dries, pack it solid with your hands, and rub the surface until a smooth film begins to appear.

4. Rub your hands against the ground, patting and rubbing the fine, powdery dirt onto the sphere. Continue this for two hours.

5. Seal the ball in a plastic bag for three or four hours. Upon removing the sphere, repeat step 4, and then once again seal the sphere in a plastic bag.

6. Remove the ball from the bag, and if it is no longer wet, polish it with a cloth until it shines.

Over at The Creators Project, you can read about Bruce Gardner’s dorodango, along with beautiful photos and a brief video.

Magie du Bouddha has a nice, humorous tutorial.

dorodango-sample-open

Have fun playing with the dirt, I know I will!

Comments

  1. rq says

    I think I’m going to try this with the kids, and enjoy it most myself, probably!

  2. johnson catman says

    It sounds like it is almost like meditation:

    Rub your hands against the ground, patting and rubbing the fine, powdery dirt onto the sphere. Continue this for two hours.

    I can see where it might be soothing to an extent. I don’t think I would have the patience for it though.

    The finished product is amazing though. It looks like it has been sealed in some kind of acrylic.

  3. says

    Johnson catman:

    I can see where it might be soothing to an extent. I don’t think I would have the patience for it though.

    I do. I’d just set up where I could watch all the baby birds hollering at their parents for food. The time would pass quickly.

  4. blf says

    The mildly deranged penguin’s approach is rather boringly traditional: Find a spot in the desert with an interesting arranged of sands and rocks, return to orbit and nuke that spot a few times, return to the spot and collect the interesting remains (often glass beads), and polish the collected remains by sticking them in a drum made of British Industrial Cheddar and inhabited by peas. The result can be quite striking, sniny, and has a pleasant glow-in-the-darkness about it.

  5. cicely says

    On first glance, I took the first pic as a parody on the cover of Twilight.
    :)
    --

  6. says

    Raucous Indignation:

    I am certain The Myth Busters did this with poop.

    Yes, they did. I think that was mentioned in The Creators Project article.

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