Color Mixing: Difference between revisions
From Montessori Album
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== Material == | == Material == | ||
Use clear dropper bottles so the colored water can be seen. Some experimentation may be necessary to get the right ratio of food coloring and water in the dropper bottles. | Use clear dropper bottles so the colored water can be seen. Some experimentation may be necessary to get the right ratio of food coloring and water in the dropper bottles.<br> | ||
Using magenta instead of red, and a cyan shade of blue will yield the best secondary colors. |
Revision as of 11:24, 20 April 2020
Color Mixing | |
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Art - Color | |
Level | Primary |
Prerequisites | Color Box 3 Eyedropper Transfer Dish Washing |
Materials | 3 dropper bottles with water heavily dyed red, yellow, and blue three small glasses marked with fill lines long handled spoon round tray |
This activity helps the child see how secondary colors are made by mixing the primary colors.
Presentation
- Take material to a table.
- Take the glasses to the sink one at a time and fill with water to the line marked on the side.
- Select one of the glasses and open the dropper bottle to the left of it. Add five drops from the bottle. Close the bottle.
- Open the bottle to the right and add five drops to the same glass. Close the bottle.
- Stir with the spoon.
- Observe that by mixing the two primary colors, a secondary color is produced: "We mixed red and yellow and we ended up with orange."
- Rotate the tray to repeat the procedure with the other two glasses.
- Clean up: Carry the glasses one at a time to the sink to empty and rinse out.
Points of Interest
Control of Error
Variations and Extensions
Material
Use clear dropper bottles so the colored water can be seen. Some experimentation may be necessary to get the right ratio of food coloring and water in the dropper bottles.
Using magenta instead of red, and a cyan shade of blue will yield the best secondary colors.