Posts Tagged ‘fireworks’

Milk Fireworks

Monday, June 2nd, 2014

milk-fireworks

My kids created milk fireworks with whole milk, dish detergent, and egg dye. You will laugh when you hear that I found this idea in a torn out page from Family Fun Magazine, and the date on the bottom of the page was over 10 years ago! I grabbed the page and wondered why I had never done this simple experiment that takes less than five minutes.

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First you need to buy some whole milk, because you need the fat in the milk for this experiment to work. This might also work with liquid whipping cream, since it has even more fat.

Pour the whole milk into a clear dish. If you don’t want to waste so much milk, you can use a smaller dish. Also take into consideration that you can’t feed this milk to your cat after the dish soap is in it. But if you hate whole milk, that’s where you can put the rest of the carton that you didn’t need: in your cat dish!

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Have your kids drip food coloring into the milk. Now pour the liquid soap into the whole milk. Enjoy the show!

You should start seeing the colors swirling around like a tye dyed shirt. The fat from the milk caused the food coloring to float at first, but then the liquid soap broke up the fat globules, causing the colors to expand and swirl into each other!

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Painting Fireworks with Kids

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

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What better time to paint fireworks than the weeks leading up to the Fourth of July?

In this humorous video, I show you how to paint fireworks on a poster board by throwing a pronged ball dunked in paint straight at the poster. Does that sound like fun? Painting fireworks with kids has never been so easy!

You will need black poster board, kid paint, and a pronged ball. You might also want some old newspaper to place under your project.

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Of course, my kids tried painting fireworks another way, which turned out to be disastrous. Take a look at our failed artwork as well as our successful painting of fireworks.

Fireworks

Monday, July 5th, 2010

fireworks

One of my favorite summer activities is watching fireworks on the fourth of July. Most major cities put on a show for free; the larger the city, the more spectacular the fireworks. If you don’t live anywhere near a city and it’s legal to set off your own fireworks, you could even have your own show.

I remember growing up in Guatemala, we would get a variety of fireworks for every major holiday. Triangle things sprayed a fountain of sparks from the middle of the street. Lots of noisy popping fireworks were connected to each other and could be set off as a string. Sparklers could be held in your hand, and you could write your name in the air. Whistlers whistled in a kind of whine, which my family didn’t like very much. And then there were bigger ones that you could shoot up into the air to pop a colorful spray into the air. Those were more expensive.

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This final kind is what most city displays in the United States use. When my husband and I had babies and toddlers, we would make sure to give the children a nice, long nap in the afternoon, because it didn’t get dark in Washington until 10 pm. We brought a sleeping bag, which we opened onto the soft part like a picnic blanket. We also had canvas chairs to sit in, but it’s better to lie down on a sleeping bag if the show is right above your head. We also brought snacks and fun things to keep the children occupied while we were waiting for it to get dark.

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The only drawback (besides waiting so long for the fireworks) is that the children were crabby the next day. But if you plan to have a low-key day the next day, this can help alleviate the crabbiness. After all, it’s not every day that you get to see fireworks.