How To Make Colorful Burning Pine Cones
To add some color to your fireplace this season, toss a couple of these magical winter warmers on the flames.
What you need:
- 1 deep glass or plastic bowl
- Newspaper or a mesh bag
- 1 foil-covered cookie sheet
- Ingredients:
- Pine cones
- 1/2 gallon of hot water
- 8 ounces of the following chemical depending on the flame color:
- for a bright green flame use alum (thallium)
- for a bright red flame use strontium chloride
- for a deep red flame use boric acid
- for a reddish-orange flame use calcium
- for a yellowish-orange flame use calcium chloride
- for a yellow flame use table salt
- for a yellow-green flame use borax (sodium tetraborate)
- for a green flame use blue vitriol (copper sulfate) or barium
- for a violet flame use saltpeter (potassium nitrate)
- or for a white flame use Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate)
Warnings:
Use only one salt or compound for color.
Be very careful handling these chemicals and follow the manufacturer's directions. Some compounds can be poisonous if mishandled.
Steps:
1. Pour 1/2 gallon of hot water into a deep glass or plastic bowl.
2. Dissolve 8 ounces of any one of the chemicals in the water.
3. Soak the pine cones in the solution for 6 hours.
4. Dry them for at least three days in a warm, dry area on newspaper or hang in a mesh bag.
Tips:
To get the pine cones looking their best, heat them in the oven at 225 degrees F on a foil-covered cookie sheet. They will open all the way and look fuller.