Aren’t these melted crayon rocks beautiful?! This is something we’ve done a few times over the past few years and is one of our favorites. I could have sworn I had posted about this before, but I guess not.
The rocks above were “painted” by Maia with the melting crayon. She especially loved the light blue and melted the entire crayon down to a nub.
We are lucky to have a good supply of small rocks in our backyard. We gathered a colander full and washed and dried them.
I spread the clean rocks out on a foil-lined cookie sheet and put them in a 350 degree Fahrenheit oven to heat up.
Once the rocks were hot, we transferred them one or two at a time to a protected surface to work, leaving the rest in the oven. The table was protected with a placemat, a washcloth, and a piece of foil. Possibly overkill. The foil is pretty necessary to catch the melting crayon and I think a washcloth or towel is wise to keep the hot rock from damaging the table surface.
Have you tried making melted crayon rocks? The crayon melts over the surface of the hot rocks and creates a smooth, vibrant, colorful coating that hardens into a waxy shell. It is so satisfying. A tad addictive even. After working on this batch of rocks together while Daphne napped yesterday, Maia collected a second batch of rocks to work on with a friend.
The melting crayon is so liquid it’s like painting with crayons. You can use one color or several. Make designs, swirls, dots, stripes, faces, whatever.
We used a variety of crayons, but mostly these push-up wax crayons, just because they were handy at the time.
Here are some more of Maia’s melted crayon rocks.
And some of mine.
If you haven’t done this yet, give it a try! And if your kiddos are too young to be working with hot rocks, then do it yourself while they nap. I bet you’ll love it.
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