Experimenting with Colors: Color-Mixing Icing Lab
Lesson 213 – Based on ideas by: Randi Austin, Kindergarten Teacher
Overview
This activity gives children a delicious hands-on way to explore color mixing using white icing as paint and pretzel sticks as “brushes.” Students experiment with primary colors and discover how new colors are created.
Objectives
Students will:
- Explore and identify the three primary colors
- Mix colors to create secondary and “new” colors
- Use language to describe their discoveries
- Strengthen fine motor skills
- Enjoy a multisensory learning experience
Materials
- White icing (1 can for about 10–12 students)
- Food coloring: red, yellow, blue
- Paper plates (one per child)
- Pretzel sticks (3–5 per child)
- Optional: wipes or damp cloths for cleanup
- Optional: small index cards for “naming” their new colors
Plan
1. Prepare the Color Stations
Give each student a paper plate with three spoonfuls of white icing spaced apart.
Add:
- 1 drop of blue food coloring to the first spoonful
- 1 drop of red to the second
- 1 drop of yellow to the third
(Keep the drops small — icing colors quickly!)
2. Introduce Primary Colors
Briefly review:
- Red
- Yellow
- Blue
Explain: “These are primary colors. We can mix them to make new colors.”
Invite predictions:
- “What do you think will happen if we mix red and yellow?”
- “What new color might blue and yellow make?”
3. Experiment & Mix
Give each child three pretzel sticks to use as stirrers.
Children mix:
- Red + yellow → orange
- Yellow + blue → green
- Blue + red → purple
Encourage exploration:
- “Try mixing just a little bit first.”
- “Try mixing more color to make it darker.”
- “Create a swirl—what does it look like?”
Students may also combine all three colors to see what happens (usually brown!).
4. Name Their New Colors
Children LOVE this step:
Have them “invent” their own color names and record them on small index cards.
Examples:
- “Sunset Pink”
- “Monster Green”
- “Blueberry Swirl”
This reinforces creativity and vocabulary.
5. Taste Test
Allow students to sample their color creations once they are finished mixing.
This is a controlled, fun reward — and keeps kids excited for the activity.
6. Clean Up
Provide wipes or damp cloths for quick cleanup of food coloring and icing.
Teacher Notes
- This activity is perfect for introducing science vocabulary like mix, blend, combine, lighter, darker, shade, tint.
- It’s a strong sensory activity (touch, sight, taste).
- Works VERY well during a colors unit, before holiday baking activities, or as a Friday fun activity.
Extensions
- Color graphing: Graph which new color students liked best.
- Literacy tie-in: Read Mouse Paint or White Rabbits’ Color Book.
- Math tie-in: Compare “how many drops” changes the shade.







