Whether you use
liquid water colours or food colouring you can mix the colours — create a potions station in the garden and let the kids discover for them selves that red and blue make purple.
Not exact matches
Place the
water, sugar, food
colouring,
liquid glucose and cream of tartar into a pan with a sugar thermometer attached and stir to combine.
Make a bowl of a washing up
liquid water mix and add some food
colouring and then blow through a straw — place a piece of paper on top and you can make prints of the bubbles formed.
Sugar Bubbles 1/2 cup of dishwashing
liquid (Dawn or Joy) 2 cups of
water 2 teaspoons of sugar * you can add a few drops of food
colouring to this recipe, but then the bubble solutions should be used outdoors only.
Then I put the flower into a glass jar with some
water which I had added some blue
liquid food
colouring to — I added blue as from experience I knew that the
colours would mix and green J's favourite
colour would be formed before the bright blue
colouring took over.
2 capfuls (20 — 25 ml)
Colour Energy
Liquid Colour Bath in Violet (a fragrance - free mix of organic pigments, glycerin, and
water)
He obtained a
liquid which was
coloured but as clear as
water, and had a peculiar aroma found from in no other plant.
For the potions, we used cheap
water from the supermarket with a dash of food
colouring (and glitter for the
liquid sunshine!)
Step 3: In a shallow dish of hot
water add 2 drops of food
colouring and a teaspoon of oil on to the surface of the
liquid.