As I said in my last post, we've been reminiscing about old projects, experiments, and recipes in my blog books from Blog2print. This time my daughter wanted to make slime again after seeing the post here. Not only did we make that kind of slime, but we also made a different kind of slime too. Keep reading to find out the 2 types of slime we made.
Recipe #1 Slime:
Mix in one bowl:
3/4 cup warm water
1 cup white glue
few drops of food coloring
Mix in a second bowl:
1 1/3 cups warm water
4 teaspoons Borax
(Borax is found in the laundry section. ****Borax should not be ingested and can cause skin reactions with some... so use your discretion!)
Pour contents of first bowl into second bowl and let sit for one minute without stirring. Then explore Slime #1!
Recipe #2 Slime:
1/4 cup water
1/4 cup white glue
1/4 cup liquid starch
few drops of food coloring
Pour all glue in mixing bowl and then add water. Stir water and glue together. Add food color. Then lastly add starch. Then have fun with Slime #2.
Making the two kinds of Slime was fun in itself and this time my daughter could actually read the recipe, so making it a great reading activity and science experiment too.
Mix in one bowl:
3/4 cup warm water
1 cup white glue
few drops of food coloring
Mix in a second bowl:
1 1/3 cups warm water
4 teaspoons Borax
(Borax is found in the laundry section. ****Borax should not be ingested and can cause skin reactions with some... so use your discretion!)
Pour contents of first bowl into second bowl and let sit for one minute without stirring. Then explore Slime #1!
Recipe #2 Slime:
1/4 cup water
1/4 cup white glue
1/4 cup liquid starch
few drops of food coloring
Pour all glue in mixing bowl and then add water. Stir water and glue together. Add food color. Then lastly add starch. Then have fun with Slime #2.
Making the two kinds of Slime was fun in itself and this time my daughter could actually read the recipe, so making it a great reading activity and science experiment too.
We compared and contrasted the two kinds of Slime as we were playing with them: Slime #1 was
more rubbery and Slime #2 was smoother and more squooshy.
Then very soon after, both slimes were mixed together....which ended all comparisons. (But it did prove that yellow-green and blue make green!) Plastic bugs made a great companion for the slime play.
C covered the bugs with slime, tore it into tiny pieces, stretched it, and pressed bugs into it to make impressions. Slime makes for such creative and FUN play with endless possibilities.
more rubbery and Slime #2 was smoother and more squooshy.
Then very soon after, both slimes were mixed together....which ended all comparisons. (But it did prove that yellow-green and blue make green!) Plastic bugs made a great companion for the slime play.
C covered the bugs with slime, tore it into tiny pieces, stretched it, and pressed bugs into it to make impressions. Slime makes for such creative and FUN play with endless possibilities.
Hope you are inspired to try out both recipes for Slime.
Do you know any other recipes for Slime?
What an awesome idea! I am pinning it to try later this summer (after I get Borax and liquid starch :))
ReplyDeleteThanks....we had so much fun. My daughter combined the two and it seems to have made a superior concoction....still going strong.
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