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Crystal Ornament

Here's a fun project for Christmas, but you'll need to start right after Thanksgiving, as the crystals take about 3 weeks to form. As this requires boiling water, adult supervision is highly recommended.

You'll need:

  • Box of Epsom Salts, usually found at a pharmacy
  • Colorful pipe cleaners
  • Straight-sided, container that can hold about 2 cups liquid
  • Old pencil or stick long enough to go over the container

While stirring a cup of boiling water, slowly pour in Epsom Salts, adding about 1/4 cup at a time. It will hold quite a lot. As soon as the solution won't turn clear with stirring, it is time to stop.

Take one or two pretty, colorful pipe cleaners. Bend it into some holiday shape at one end, leaving the other for a "hanger." Hang it over a pencil suspended over a STRAIGHT SIDED container, or you won't be able to get your crystal out. (I learned this one the hard way, obviously.) Pour the Epsom Salt solution over the pipe cleaner in the container. Set it in the warmest room in your home where it won't be disturbed.

In about 3 weeks, the water will have evaporated, leaving long, lovely crystals behind on the pipe cleaner, just in time to hang up as an ornament.

Don't try to save for next year: this is very fragile, and moisture in the air will dissolve it over time.

Note the sizes and shape of the crystals. The shape is similar to the shape of the molecule of the salt. Computer chips are made from slices (wafers) of huge silicon crystals.

You older "chemists" might enjoy making crystals of other substances.

Other Crystal-Making Web Pages

Charcoal Crystal Garden
Colorful, small, delicate crystals grow on a charcoal or brick surface.

Crystals on a String
This one uses baking soda.

Recipes for Growing Sugar Crystals
A rather tasty experiment that you can eat after you tire of looking at it.

Crystals Explained

Crystals: More Than Meets the Eye
It is the purpose of this unit to acquaint the student with the intriguing world of crystals, their structure, formation, and uses. An advanced explanation from Yale University.

Snowflakes and Snow Crystals
This site is all about snow crystals and snowflakes -- what they are, where they come from, and just how these remarkably complex and beautiful structures are created, quite literally, out of thin air.

What is a Crystal?
When we grow crystals we are separating all the building block molecules into individual units in water and letting them fall naturally into their appropriate place in the repetitive structure as the water evaporates. Chemistry & New Zealand.

Yes, Virginia, some snowflakes can look the same!
The old adage that 'no two snowflakes are alike' may ring true for larger snowflakes, but it might not hold true for smaller, simpler crystals that fall before they've had a chance to fully develop.

Grow edible rock candy with Highlights Catalog's Crystal Growing Kit!
 
Snowflake: Winter's Secret Beauty
The Snowflake: Winter's Secret Beauty
by Patricia Rasmussen (Photographer), Kenneth George Libbrecht
Snowflakes may be an everyday, common subject, but you've never seen them like this!
 

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