1. Carefully pour some milk in a dish so it just covers the bottom. 2. Gently add one or two drops of red, blue, and yellow food coloring to the same spot in the center of the milk. 3. Dip a cotton ...
Pour the glue and water mixture into a lid until the bottom is covered. Be careful not to add too much if you are using a lid. Add 4-5 drops of food coloring to different areas of the glue mixture. In ...
Children will actually watch a chemical reaction happen right before their eyes when they combine milk, food coloring, and dish soap for this experiment. Bonus: They can turn their “art” into ...
Did you know that there are quite a few other applications of food dyes ... you can do an experiment including oil, water, a coloring and fizzy tablets, for example calcium or magnesium.
To conduct this experiment, you will need: Mason jars, food coloring, water, scissors, white flowers and a notebook. Fill up the mason jars half way and add food coloring to each jar. Make a 45 ...
Create beautiful swirling patterns while learning about surface tension, molecular interactions, and how soap affects milk's properties. Similar to the pepper dance experiment, watch as soap creates ...