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Painting with Salt Experiment

Have you ever made paint from salt? Try this painting with salt experiment! It’s a fun process art and science activity! Kids will love to watch the paint dry and see all of the salt crystals remaining.

RELATED: Salt Painting

Make Your Own Paint from Salt

Did you know you can paint with salt? Simply dilute the salt in hot water and use it to paint with!

Kids will think it’s magic when your picture starts to “appear”.

And if you haven’t tried salt painting (where you dab salt with watercolors) it’s another fun process art activity! See our salt painting instructions.

Painting with Salt Experiment for Kids

You can easily turn this into a science experiment by testing different kinds of salt.

We tried out course sea salt and the effect was much different! The paint dried more clear but with larger salt crystals.

Have kids use a magnifying glass to inspect the salt crystals once your picture has dried.

Here’s a closer look at how the table salt dried:

Salt on Paper Science

Supplies to Make Salt Paint

Here is what you need to make your own paint from salt:

– Salt – we used table salt. You can also use course salt or sea salt but the final effect will be different (less white and more crystals)

– Hot water *adults to assist with this

– Dark cardstock note: the cardstock cannot be coated or the paint will repel from the paper. If you find when you are painting the “paint” is not soaking into the paper then try a different paper that does not run/repel from the paper. We used this kind of Recollections paper.

Science Painting Salt Water

Watch the Video Tutorial!

How to Make Your Own Paint from Salt

1. Start by adding 1 tablespoon of table salt to a small bowl.

Note – you can also try this with different kinds of salt! This would make a fun science experiment to test out different salts (sea salt, table salt, course salt, pink salt, etc)

Add Salt to Bowl

2. Add 3 tablespoons of hot water to the bowl.

Have an adult boil water in a kettle and pour in 3 tablespoons to dissolve the salt.

Caution

An adult should do this part. The salt water will be very hot!

Add Hot Water to Bowl

3. Mix the salt in the bowl until majority of the salt has dissolved.

Note – not all of the salt will dissolve and you’ll be left with some of it still at the bottom of the bowl.

Mix until salt dissolved

4. Use a paintbrush to paint whatever you’d like!

Once the salt water has cooled, kids can now paint!

We painted three different designs of snowflakes. You could also do this for Valentine’s Day and paint hearts on a dark red or purple paper. The options are endless!

Observe that the paint goes on clear with some small pieces of salt still in the salt water.

Paint Snowflake with Salt Water

5. Once your picture is complete, allow it to dry for 24 hours.

After about 24 hours, your picture should be dry. The water that was in the “paint” is now evaporated and you are left with the salt crystals.

For a fun science twist, compare your hypothesis of what you thought would happen when the paint dries. You can also make observations on the differences between different kinds of salt.

Paint a Snowflake with Salt Water

Your final art will be white in color if you chose to paint with table salt. If you used a thicker salt, you will likely have less white and larger salt crystals left behind.

Painting with Salt Art

More Activities with Salt

Salt Painting
Art

Salt Painting

Colored Salt in Jars
Crafts

Colored Salt

Salt Painting Rainbow
Activities

Spring Salt Painting

Leaf Salt Painting
Fall

Leaf Salt Painting

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