REVIEW · MAUI
Epoxy Resin Art and Craft Coaster Set Experience
Book on Viator →Operated by Yulia Maui Art · Bookable on Viator
Resin art turns Maui nature into décor. In this epoxy coaster set class in the Paia area, you craft four coasters using food-safe resin plus real decorative elements like dried flowers, leaves, stones, and gold leaf. It is creative, practical, and the kind of hands-on experience that gives you something you can actually use at home.
I especially like how the session is built around real technique, not just watching someone else work. You’ll learn how to measure, mix, color, and pour slow-curing epoxy, and you also get hands-on guidance while you prep molds and finish pieces. One drawback to consider: the class isn’t suitable for children under 5 or for pregnant women, and you’ll be working with tools like a heat gun and torch, so it’s best when you’re comfortable getting a little hands-on.
In This Review
- Why This Maui Resin Coaster Set Workshop Feels Different From Typical Souvenirs
- What You’ll Make: A Set of 4 Food-Safe Coasters With Nature + Gold Leaf
- The Step-by-Step Skills That Make This Class Worth Your Time
- Paia Start and Ho’okipa Beach Park Stop: Design Inspiration on Maui Time
- What’s Included for $135: Supplies, Drinks, and a Finished-Product Goal
- The Real-World Teaching Style: Yulia Maui Art’s Patient, Positive Approach
- Who Should Book, and Who Should Skip This Resin Workshop
- Tips to Get More From Your Class (Before and During)
- Should You Book This Epoxy Resin Coaster Set Class?
- FAQ
- How long is the epoxy resin coaster set workshop?
- What will I make during the class?
- What’s included in the price?
- Can I bring alcohol?
- What is the meeting location?
- Who can participate?
Why This Maui Resin Coaster Set Workshop Feels Different From Typical Souvenirs

Maui has plenty of beach shops selling pretty things. This workshop gives you something more personal: you create your own coasters from scratch, choosing colors and arranging nature-style details into a finished set you can put on your table.
The format matters. The group size is capped at 12 travelers, so you get real attention while you’re mixing resin, controlling bubbles, and working through the pour and finishing steps. That small-group feel makes the class feel more like a guided making session than a factory-style craft hour.
And if you care about design that fits your home, you’ll appreciate the way the coaster concept blends function with style. These aren’t just decorative tiles. They’re designed to protect surfaces, so the final result can live in your everyday routine.
What You’ll Make: A Set of 4 Food-Safe Coasters With Nature + Gold Leaf

Your end product is a set of four coasters, made with food-safe resin. That wording is important. It means the workshop is set up with a purpose beyond aesthetics, and it frames the materials choice and finishing steps around day-to-day use.
You’ll build the coaster look using a mix of nature textures and coastal shine, including:
- dried flowers and leaves
- stones and decorative elements
- gold leaf accents
- sand and sparkle options
- shells and sea-themed figurines
The provided starter kit leans into an ocean-inspired palette. You’ll get sea shells, a turtle, sea star, shark figurines, sand, glitter, stones, and colored glass. You can keep it subtle (a light beach-and-gold look) or go more layered and dramatic, depending on how you arrange your pieces.
The best part for me is that every coaster can reflect your taste without feeling like you need advanced art skills. Even if you’ve never handled epoxy resin before, the workshop is structured so you can follow the process and still personalize the result.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Maui.
The Step-by-Step Skills That Make This Class Worth Your Time
This is a 1.5 hour workshop focused on the practical “how” behind resin art. You’ll cover safety basics, then move into mixing, coloring, pouring, and finishing.
Here’s what you’ll work through, in the order that helps you avoid common resin mistakes:
- PPE and preparation: Gloves, aprons, and other PPE are included. You’ll also get safety and prep tips before you start mixing.
- Measuring and mixing slow-curing epoxy: The resin you’ll use is slow curing, which generally gives you more time to work compared to fast-curing products.
- Coloring and pigments: You’ll learn how to choose pigments and blend colors so your mixes don’t turn muddy or uneven.
- Choosing decorations: You’ll get guidance on selecting flowers, fruits, and other decor elements that work well in a coaster format.
- Mold prep: Before pouring, you’ll prepare your mold so the finish looks intentional.
- Heat gun and torch techniques: You’ll learn how to use these tools to manage details like surface bubbles and finishing touches.
- Professional finishing: You’ll be taught the final steps to bring the pieces to a polished result.
This skill set is the real value. If you’ve ever looked at resin crafts online and thought, I could never get that surface right, this class is designed to bring you closer with direct instruction.
Paia Start and Ho’okipa Beach Park Stop: Design Inspiration on Maui Time

Your experience includes two stops: Paia and Ho’okipa Beach Park. Even if your hands are tied up in art later, these locations matter because they set the mood and feed your coaster design.
Paia is a great launching point for a creative afternoon. It’s where you’ll meet for the session at 24 Luna Ln, Paia. Starting here keeps things easy, and it also helps you avoid turning your day into a long drive-and-wait puzzle.
Then there’s Ho’okipa Beach Park. This is the scenic piece of the itinerary, and it makes sense. If you’re using shells, sand texture, and ocean-inspired shapes, a coastal viewpoint puts those materials into context fast. You’ll get a chance to look at color and patterns in the real place you’re pulling inspiration from, not just on a screen.
One practical note: the itinerary doesn’t list exact timing for the park stop. So treat it as a short add-on to the workshop experience, not a full extra sight-seeing block. If you’re hoping for a big beach excursion, this class is more about making than roaming.
What’s Included for $135: Supplies, Drinks, and a Finished-Product Goal

At $135 per person, you’re paying for instruction plus materials plus a guided pathway to a finished, useful set of coasters. In other words, it’s not just “pay to play.” You’re paying to learn how the process works and to get access to the tools and decorative components.
Here’s what’s included:
- bottled water and juice
- PPE: gloves and aprons, plus other safety gear
- materials for your coaster designs, including sea-themed elements and decor (shells, turtle, sea star, shark figurines, sand, glitter, stones, colored glass, and more)
Alcohol isn’t included. You can BYOB, which is nice if you want the vibe to feel more like a laid-back hang while you work. Just remember you’ll be using resin tools during the class, so plan to keep it light.
Transportation isn’t included. You’ll want to arrange your own ride to the meeting point near public transportation.
If you’re comparing options, the value here is that the class gives you a complete outcome goal (four coasters) and the technique behind it (mixing, coloring, pouring, and finishing). That’s why it feels different from a cheaper “just decorate” craft.
Also worth noting: this experience is commonly booked about 48 days in advance. If your dates are fixed, it’s smart to book early rather than waiting for a last-minute decision.
The Real-World Teaching Style: Yulia Maui Art’s Patient, Positive Approach

The provider behind this class is Yulia Maui Art, and the teaching style shows up clearly in the feedback you’ll see associated with the experience. People talk about warm, encouraging guidance and a teacher who’s patient while you figure out what works for your own design.
One reviewer specifically connected the coasters to a personal ritual, saying they were used for tea ceremonies and genuinely improved the practice. That’s the kind of detail that matters. It’s not just a craft you hang on a shelf. It’s a set you can bring into your daily life.
Another important detail: the supplies are described as very stocked, with lots of options to personalize your project. That aligns with the workshop promise that you’ll learn how to measure, mix, and choose pigments and decorations, then apply that knowledge to a coaster set that looks like you.
If you’re the type who wants to ask questions and get feedback, this is the format to choose.
Who Should Book, and Who Should Skip This Resin Workshop

This one is for makers. If you like hands-on crafting, enjoy choosing colors and details, and want a result you’ll actually use, you’ll probably have a great time.
It’s not suitable for:
- children under 5 years old
- pregnant women
Most travelers can participate, and service animals are allowed. The setting is near public transportation, which helps if you’re not driving.
Because you’ll work with heat gun and torch tools, it’s also a good match if you’re comfortable following safety instructions and using PPE. If you prefer a purely relaxing experience with no tools and no resin handling, you might want to look for a different Maui craft option.
Tips to Get More From Your Class (Before and During)

I’m going to keep this practical, because resin workshops reward preparation.
Wear something you can protect. You’ll get gloves and an apron, but resin art can still be messy, especially while you’re pouring and arranging items like leaves or stones.
Come ready to experiment. Slow-curing epoxy gives you time to work, but it still rewards focus. If you want a clean surface, be patient with your mixing and pour steps, and don’t rush your pigment blending.
Plan your design choices in your head. It helps to decide your vibe before you start pouring. For example: do you want a more ocean-clear look with shells and sand texture, or a more botanical style with dried leaves and flowers?
Use the tools the instructor shows you. Heat gun and torch technique is one of the biggest “make it look professional” moments. If you get guidance on how to use them for your specific surface, take it.
Ask questions while you’re still in the mixing stage. Once resin is combined and poured, it’s harder to fix decisions without affecting the look. Clarifying pigment amount or placement early can save you frustration later.
Finally, bring a mindset that this is a learning session. Even if your coasters aren’t identical to the inspiration photos in your head, your finished set will reflect your choices and your effort.
Should You Book This Epoxy Resin Coaster Set Class?

Book it if you want a Maui activity that creates a real, functional souvenir. The combination of food-safe resin, guided technique (mixing, pigments, pouring, finishing), and a small 12-person cap makes it a strong option for couples, friends, and solo travelers who like making things.
Skip it if safety and tools aren’t your comfort zone or if the class timing doesn’t work for your day. Also, if you’re traveling with a child under 5 or someone who is pregnant, this isn’t the right fit.
If you’re on Maui and you want more than another photo stop, this is the kind of creative experience that gives you a set of coasters you can use tomorrow, not just admire later.
FAQ
How long is the epoxy resin coaster set workshop?
It runs for about 1 hour 30 minutes.
What will I make during the class?
You’ll create a set of 4 coasters using food-safe epoxy resin and decorative elements like dried flowers, leaves, stones, and gold leaf.
What’s included in the price?
The class includes bottled water and juice, PPE such as gloves and aprons, and decorative materials like sea shells and sea-themed figurines, sand, glitter, colored glass, and more.
Can I bring alcohol?
Alcoholic beverages aren’t included, but you’re welcome to BYOB.
What is the meeting location?
You start at 24 Luna Ln, Paia, HI 96779, USA, and the activity ends back at the meeting point.
Who can participate?
The class is not suitable for children under 5 or pregnant women. Most travelers can participate, service animals are allowed, and it’s offered in English.






















