Friday, October 18, 2013

Bath Bombs

Courtney and I made bath bombs last night. She bought some at LUSH - Kai, Courtney and I all enjoy them. The recipe here looked easy, so we tried a variation of that recipe. I ordered an enormous bag of citric acid from Amazon (10 pounds, we will either be making a ton of bath bombs or Kai and I will be doing some interesting "experiments").

When I gathered the ingredients last night, Bryce was skeptical of my intentions. When I got out the wonderful tare weight scale Craig got me, Bryce decided I was making "blue candy" and I decided he's been watching far too much "Breaking Bad." The rather interesting thing about using a scale was that I dumped the 1 pound box of baking soda into the bowl and discovered that the box actually had 17.5 ounces baking soda. I adjusted the recipe accordingly to keep the proportions the same.

We mixed 17.5 ounces baking soda, 8.75 ounces citric acid, 8.75 ounces of Episom salts and 8.75 ounces corn starch in a big bowl. As Courtney whisked the dry ingredients, I squirted scented baby oil in until we had a consistency we thought would work (this seemed easier than finding essential oils and other bath oils...but it also resulted in extremely oily bath bombs...we have plans for more experimentation on this part of the process). We used old plastic Easter eggs as molds, filling only the larger side and popping them out as we went. As you'll see in the picture, we added food coloring for about half of them.


I took a bath with two last night - the fizz didn't last long and the water became extremely oily. We will explore different oils and maybe adding water (I'm wary of water because whenever Kai and I use it in our "experiments" using this same reaction, we have trouble adding small enough amounts).

Because I'm not in love with this batch of bath bombs, I let Kai play with several in her bath today. The shape of the bath bombs sparked a great deal of imagination play. She cracked an "egg" (one of the white bath bombs) into the bowl where she was making pancake batter and chopped up a "tomato" nearby:


After she added the purple bath bomb to her batter she added a bit of water:


She had a great time playing with the bath bombs, but I told her next time we would have to do these experiments outside. She and the bathtub were so oily I had to put her in the shower when we finished. I think we could make different colored "bombs" and have fun outside outside with a squirt bottle of water, bowls, and the like.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Kai Projects: Fun with Jello

After my success with Kool-Aid, I decided to see what we could do with jello. I got some cheap salt shakers at Target and filled them with jello. The first day, we used the part of the jello packet that didn't fit in the salt shakers to make jello play dough. So far, this is my favorite of the jello projects.

This was the recipe I found on Pinterest:

1 cup flour
1 cup water
2 T salt
2 T cream of tartar
2 T oil
1 box jello

Mix together and cook on the stove over low/medium heat until a ball forms. Knead in extra flour until no longer sticky.

Because I only had partial boxes of jello, I made several smaller batches. This also gave us a variety of colors. I basically quartered the recipe and made five batches. In this picture you can see the three finished balls of play dough, the blue play dough cooling before we kneaded in extra flour, and Kai mixing the last batch of yellow play dough before I put it on the stove. You can also see my filled salt shakers behind a flour covered Kai:


This stuff is amazing - by far the best play dough we've made at home. It has a very nice texture and it smells lovely, not at all like the commercial stuff. Kai has played with it several times now (it is starting to get a bit mixed together, but it has maintained its other qualities):


This morning we tried our usual shaving cream paint with the jello. I don't think the colors are quite as bright as I would like. I used our sidewalk chalk method, mixing the jello with water before adding the shaving cream. I think this might work better if I skipped the water.


The other thing we did with jello was make "glue play dough" or gak / flubber. We've done this before with food coloring, but I thought it would be interesting to try with jello. Again we used our five colors:


For some reason, the yellow didn't set up properly (I wonder if it is because we used more yellow jello due to the lighter color and this interfered with the glue/borax reaction) and I ended up throwing it out. Kai began mixing this immediately:


When I pulled it out of the fridge this morning, the mixture was complete - it's purple with a few green and red highlights:


The consistency was odd this morning, though. I've left it out at room temperature to see if it will improve. This may be one project that needs to have food coloring.

Kai Projects: Fun with Shaving Cream

I've hardly posted since Courtney started school, because my time has been filled doing "projects" with Kai. Here are a few of our favorites with shaving cream.

Kai loves shaving cream "paint" - shaving cream mixed with color. She enjoys making the paint, adding the colors, mixing it up, and finding out what color it will be. We initially used food coloring, but that dyed our hands and clothes (and I was worried about dying the pavement in the backyard by accident). We made our own powdered paint out of sidewalk chalk. I bought a big box of sidewalk chalk. We sorted the colors and put similar colors into ziplock bags. Then we pounded the chalk with hammers until we had powder. Here we added the chalk powder to the shaving cream in our craft muffin tin (an old muffin tin that is no longer used for cooking):


It was hard to mix the powdered chalk with the shaving cream. So the next time, we mixed the chalk with water in the tin before adding the shaving cream. This resulted in brighter colors and better consistency paint:


My other favorite coloring agent is Kool-Aid. We've used other powdered drink mixes (as pictured here), but I love the smell of Kool-Aid! Here we've mixed it with water and shaving cream in Kai's squirt bottles (it separated a bit in the picture, but it mixed as she squirted it out):


For some reason, this was the logical thing for Kai to do with this paint:


At least it was a warm day, so both Kai and the pavement were easy to hose off when she finished.