| If you enjoy sitting around your fireplace and watching colorful
flames dance, you'll be happy to know you can color your own flames quite
cheaply. Basically, there are three methods of coloring fireplace flames.
You can soak the logs in an alcohol solution which contains certain chemicals.
Or you can soak the logs in a water solution containing certain chemicals
and then dry them. And finally, you can just throw certain chemicals into
the flames. The various chemicals or salts required for certain colors
of flames are as follows:
3 parts Potassium sulphate (Chromealum) and 1 part potassium nitrate (Salt Peter) for violet flames Strontium chloride for red flames Calcium chloride (bleaching powder) for blue flames Magnesium sulphate (Epson Salts) for white flames Baronsalts (Borax) for yellowish green flames Copper sulphate (blue vitrol/Bluestone) for green flames Sodium chloride (table salt) for yellow flames Colorful flames: 1/2 lb. baking soda to 1/2 gallon of water, or 1/2 lb. borax to 1/2 gallon of water, or 1/2 lb. salt to 1/2 gallon of water. Soak pine cones overnight and put in mesh bag to dry You may also treat pine cones, coarse sawdust or cork waste and throw them into the fireplace to color the fire. They are far easier to treat and take less time to dry. Here are two methods for treating bases such as course sawdust, pine cones and cork waste. Best for sawdust - Dissolve the chemical in water. Stir in your base. When the solution is completely absorbed, spread the base out in a thin layer to dry. Best for cork based chips - Add 1 pint of liquid glue to 7 parts of water. Crush the chemical to a fine powder and add 1 pound of the powder to each gallon of glue water. Put into the liquid as much of the sawdust, cork waste or pine cones that it will take, stirring and adding more base until all the liquid has been absorbed. Spread out on a rack to dry. It is better to treat separate portions of your base with the solution
of a single chemical than to treat the base in a single mixture of various
chemicals. After drying the separately treated portions of
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