Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Rainbow in a Jar


I remember doing this project when I was young-- one of my favorites.  I loved the process of making it, the way the colors looked next to each other, how the layers undulated in the jar.   I remember begging my mother to let me do this more.  She claimed that it used too much salt – way too expensive.  Given that the salt I bought my children was $0.50 a canister and could make four of these each, I realize now that my mother was avoiding the mess--  Hrmmph.  Well, fair warning, this is a salty mess, but oh so much fun. And relatively easy to clean up with 2 or 3 sweepings.

I love getting ready for projects, so much promise and cooperation. 
 This project makes for a good easter centerpiece - so many pretty pastels.


Here's the how-to:

Materials
Paper
Colored Chalk
Salt
Small Jars --We’re out of the baby-phase so no baby food jars in this house, but if you have them, they are ideal for this project. I found some old plastic craft jars I hadn’t used, so went with that. I highly recommend using glass as the chalk dust sticks less.

1.     Gather Materials.  My suggestion is to get a set of materials for each child - makes for less yelling and grabbing. I know we’ll use them again, too.
Plus, that way they get to label.
2.     Pour salt on a piece of paper, enough to make a layer about 1/4 “ thick in your chosen container. This is tactilely so wonderful – let your kids play with it – or design with it.
3.     Take your chosen chalk color and rub the chalk back and forth across the salt until you get the desired color saturation.
4.     Carefully, pour layer of colored salt into container.
5.     Use the opposite side or a new piece of the paper for a new color (these pages can be used for chalk drawings after the project is over).
6.     Pour layers at angles and around the jar to get interesting strata.  You can rotate the jar while pouring to achieve this.
7.      Repeat process with new colors until jar is completely full.  Take care not to shake the jar as this will mix the layers up – brown salt, no fun.   Add lid and Voila!
8.     Take a moment to relish in the happy feeling you get making something and appreciate the colors and layers and how they look.
9.     Display artfully.

41 comments:

  1. Beautiful! Great craft idea. I'll have to give this one a try! Anne, your photography is wonderful!

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  2. Wow! I remember seeing this when I was a child at friends houses but I never knew how it was done.Great post and pictures! You give me ideas for my school job! Thanks!

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  3. Your house looks like so much fun!!

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  4. This is a great project!!! I'll have to wait a couple of years (you can imagine what a mess it would be now at 3!), but it's on my list of things to do!!! And I also really enjoy your photography.

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  5. lovely! I've seen this project before but never where you color your own salt, what a great idea.

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  6. What a fantastic idea! I love how colourful they are. I bet the kids at church would really enjoy making these. Niki xxx

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  7. This would be fun to try with coloured bath salts and give as gifts.

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  8. thanks for sharing...great for a birthday party!

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  9. You've saved the day! I was trying to think of a craft to do with my troop of 6 y.o. daisy girl scouts and coming up empty until Design Mom linked you up!

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  10. This is a great craft idea for the kids! With the week of rain that we are expecting here in San Francisco, I definitely will be trying this one.

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  11. Awesome idea! Great summer craft project.

    Hugs and Mocha,
    Stesha

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  12. Hi Anne. I love this! I am the crafts editor at Parents mag, and I'd love to chat with you about crafts for magazine. Thanks!
    amanda.kingloff@meredith.com

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  13. What a FUN idea! I didn't realize that the chalk would color the salt. So does the salt sort of work like sandpaper and make chalk dust that colors the salt?? So curious I think we'll have to try it. You see the layered sand a lot, but this is more fun and simpler to be able to make all the colors yourself. THANKS for sharing!!

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  14. Thanks so much for sharing this. I tried it today with my Girl Scout troop and everyone loved the project. The results were beautiful! And several of the girls got creative and blended several colors of chalk together to make different shades. Fun project!

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  15. Yay! so glad you did the project and it was a success. It is somehow so satisfying seeing your hard work poured into that jar in such beautiful ways, isn't it?

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  16. I came here via the 'wonderyears'. This is such a heart warming way of beautifying unused glass jars/bottles. I must try this. Your display on the window sill makes such a pretty picture. Thanks for the inspiration :)

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  17. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this craft. Planning on doing it with my Brownie group for our year end party. Can anyone give a rough idea how long it takes? THANKS!

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  18. Thanks for all your lovely comments.

    Jacquelyn, I would say it took us between 30 to 50 minutes or so to complete two jars each (more with clean-up time). I have one that rushes and one that is careful and one that is distracted all the time. The more kids you add, the longer it will take the whole group to compete. Have fun and send pictures!

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  19. My son and I tried this a couple of days back. he absolutely loved it :) just blogged about it http://creatingmemorieswithtna.blogspot.com/2011/05/rainbow-in-jar.html

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  20. We just did this today--SO fantastic!!! Thank you so much for the idea! Easy, fun--my 5 year old LOVED it!

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  21. I have never heard of doing this before. What a great project. We are definitely going to try this.

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  22. I can't wait to try this with our art group! Thank you so much for sharing such a great and inexpensive project!!!

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  23. I remember doing this as a kid in an art class - it was a lot of fun an pretty simple. Let me add a few tips: 1) you can use "playground sand" too. 2) smash the chalk up first and then mix it with the salt or use powdered paint 2) you can use a pencil or end of an artist's paintbrush to create designs like flying birds. Thanks!

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  24. new to your blog ... marked it on pinterest and just did it this afternoon with my littles. Thanks for the idea!

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  25. I really enjoy your blog! Thanks a lot!

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  26. What fun!! I added this to my pinterest list. Can't wait to try it with my daughter!

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  27. Wow! this blew my mind! i always wanted to know how to do this! My parents would always buy specific craft kits to make these, if only they knew it was this easy!

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  28. Can you tell me how big the jars are that you used and where you got them? I would love to try this for a rainbow birthday party we're having soon.

    Thanks!!

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  29. Ohh - fun! The jars are about 3 inches high and an inch and 3/4 on each side. I think I got them at JoAnn Fabrics a long time ago. Small jam jars, babyfood jars, or condiment jars all work well for this too.

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  30. Such a wonderful idea! I blogged about the rainbows-in-a-jar here:

    http://www.chickabug.com/blog/2011/10/rainbow-party-activities.html

    Thank you for the inspiration! : )

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  31. Hi, just added a link to this from my blog. Thanks for the inspiration.

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  32. Just finished this!! thank you so much for the idea!!

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  33. Vinyl tablecloths are your friend! They are so cheap, and make great floor covers which can then be picked up careful and the waste dumped easily into the trash. Great for finger painting, play doh, and I'm sure for this project as well.

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  34. My kids just did this project.My son is 11 and my daughter is 8.Great project for both of them. They really enjoyed it! Thank you!

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    1. Yay! I'm so thrilled to hear that! It is so much fun, isn't it??

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  35. We did these as kids in the summer. Instead of rubbing the salt and chalk on the paper, we used old cool whip containers. It contained the salt a lot better and was easier on clean-up.

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    1. The cool whip containers is brilliant–definitely would help with the mess and the pouring!

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  36. I LOVE THIS! We're doing a Rainbow Birthday Party theme for our daughter and I think this is the perfect outdoor craft! Emphasizing the [outdoor] not inside my house with 30 kids! LoL Thanks for posting this!

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