Chemistry

 

Quick Intro

Chemistry Activities introduce kids and families to the exciting world of reactions, mixtures, and materials through safe, hands-on experiments like color-changing reactions, making slime, crystal growing, and simple kitchen chemistry. These activities spark curiosity and problem-solving while helping participants understand how everyday substances interact and change. When done with family and friends, chemistry activities encourage teamwork, communication, and shared excitement as everyone predicts outcomes, tests ideas, and celebrates surprising results together. They build confidence in scientific thinking, make abstract concepts feel tangible, and create memorable learning moments that turn curiosity into a lifelong love of discovery. 🧪✨

More Info on Chemistry

Chemistry is the study of matter—what things are made of, how substances interact, and how materials change through chemical reactions. It explains everyday phenomena such as cooking food, cleaning with soap, rust forming on metal, and how medicines work in the body. By exploring atoms, molecules, states of matter, and reactions, chemistry helps learners understand the building blocks of the world around them and how small changes at the molecular level can have big effects.

Families can learn chemistry together through safe, hands-on activities that make abstract ideas feel tangible. Simple experiments like mixing baking soda and vinegar, making slime, growing crystals, or testing acids and bases with natural indicators introduce key concepts in a fun way. Cooking and baking together provide real-life chemistry lessons through measurements, temperature changes, and chemical reactions. Visiting science museums, watching age-appropriate experiments, or using household items for guided demonstrations encourages curiosity and teamwork. These shared activities help demystify chemistry and turn learning into an engaging, memorable experience for the whole family.

Alcohol Ink Jewelry

Alcohol Ink Jewelry

Today we made alcohol ink on Yupo paper and turned it into jewelry by adhering it onto the metal piece and then adhering the glass cabochon onto that.