Problem or Purpose:
~Title: To Dye For
~I’m going to see which egg dye method will come out the most vibrant?
~Independent variable: egg, water, & vinegar ~ Dependent Variable: Kool-Aid, Food Coloring, & Egg Dye Kit
Hypothesis:
I believe the Kool-Aid will come out for vibrant rather than an Easter Egg Kit and food coloring.
Overview of Procedures:
Materials: 9 eggs, Vinegar, Water, 9 containers, Easter Egg dye Kit, red, green, and blue food coloring(1 of each color), red, green, and blue Kool-Aid packets(1 of each color)
Steps:
Boil 9 eggs (it doesn’t matter the size, just make sure all are the same size)
Get out 3 containers for the Kool-Aid packets & fill each one with one color of the packets Get out 3 containers for the Easter Egg
For the experiment we used a myriad of typical lab supplies, like beakers and syringes, and watered down food coloring. We also used a fridge to keep the chickens cool while they marinated overnight. After
Step5: Use a lager cookie cutter to cut the dough and place them on the cookie sheet
First there are a few materials needed to take an impression. The main ingredient is the alginate. Four or five table spoons of alginate are just enough to get the job done. A mixing bowl capable of holding at least three cups of the mixture is also needed. A spatula is needed for mixing the ingredients together. Another import...
First, fill your clear jar with water, preferably cool. Use your small bowl and add oil. Next, add your four colors to your bowl of oil. Mix thoroughly with your fork. The liquids need to make a deep red color, or close to red. Make the colors and oil are settled. Once everything is mixed, carefully pour the contents of the bowl into the jar of water. It make take a few seconds, but the colored oil with float to the top. Give it a little more time; this shouldn’t take a while. If you pay attention, the oil will start to slowly drip from the rim to the bottom of the jar, just like blood.
...ease the speed to medium. Slowly add the remaining sugar to the egg whites and continue to mix.
There are some mistakes that are short-lived, while others linger long after the effects have disappeared. Through pictures and memories, mistakes and decisions live on. Growing up in a world in which every day was a replica of the one before, making a drastic change was exactly what I wanted to do. So I spent all of the ten dollars I had earned over the summer and I bought my first bottle of hair dye.
Materials: Water table, dirt, fossil rocks, regular rocks, toy bugs, sifter, large magnifying glass, and digging tools.
First, you have to collect your supplies. You need a hollow, leprechaun-sized, cardboard box. You also need about 15-20 shiny, gold coins, chocolate or real.
After choosing the flavor that best suits your taste buds, the second step is making sure that your kitchen houses some necessary equipment for making the Kool-Aid. Find a two-quart pitcher. Plastic is nice, but glass pitchers allow the liquid to shine through and add festive coloration to any refrigerator shelf. Next, find a long-handled wooden spoon, a one-cup measuring cup, a water faucet that spouts drinkable water, usable white sugar, and an ice cube tray full of ice. Then, you are ready to mix.
Egg Albumen Experiment The purpose of this investigation is to establish which is the lowest concentration of Copper (II) Sulphate solution that will denature a sample of egg albumen (egg white) at room temperature. The base of the reaction is the globular protein (albumen) being denatured by a heavy metal (Copper (II)), the copper (II) reacts with the NH3 group causing it to denature, this means the proteins' secondary and tertiary structures are being altered and refolding into different shapes, this resulting in a change from the substance being clear to turning opaque.[1] As the concentration of the denaturants increases more folding and changing of shape will occur and therefore more denaturing will occur and at a faster rate. From this I can predict that that lowest concentration of the solution is approximately at 0.03m solution.
(If your pallet is full clean it out with water, and then fill it with the colors you need)
Once the garment is chosen it is time to purchase the dye. Dye kits can very easily be purchased in craft stores, such as Hobby Lobby and Michaels, and will include everything you need. Inside of the kit there will be rubber gloves, rubber bands, soda ash, urea, and easy to follow instructions. The dyes will come in squeeze bottles separately if they are not already available. Out of all the dyes the best one to use is Progon dyes because they are the brightest.
Finding some containers to hold the dye is the next step. You will need one container for each color you would like to make. Any container big enough to hold one half cup of water will do, such as small mason jars or coffee cups. Once you have selected your containers, you will need to fill each with one half cup of hot water. Then add one tablespo...
Before we start the preparations, we will need to have the basic ingredients, and utensils. The ingredients are: 185g butter using Kerry gold, but any unsalted butter would do the job, 185g dark chocolate of Callebaut, 85g plain flour, 40g cocoa powder you can use the powder you make chocolate milk with, 50g white chocolate drops of Callebaut or just
White poster paper, pictures of fishes and flowers, paint (primary colours), paint brushes, water containers, newspaper, sanitary plates (palettes).