Crystals are formed when atoms line up in patterns and solidify.  There are crystals everywhere — in the form of salt, sugar, sand, diamonds, quartz, and many more!


To make crystals, you need to make a very special kind of solution called a supersaturated solid solution.  Here’s what that means: if you add salt by the spoonful to a cup of water, you’ll reach a point where the salt doesn’t disappear (dissolve) anymore and forms a lump at the bottom of the glass.


The point at which it begins to form a lump is just past the point of saturation. If you heat up the saltwater, the lump disappears.  You can now add more and more salt, until it can’t take any more (you’ll see another lump starting to form at the bottom).  This is now a supersaturated solid solution.  Mix in a bit of water to make the lump disappear.  Your solution is ready for making crystals.  But how?


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31 Responses to “Rock Candy Crystals”

  1. Aurora Lipper says:

    A grocery store should have the supplies for this experiment.

  2. suzanne_mangeri says:

    Which are the best stores to find ingrideants?

  3. Aurora Lipper says:

    The paperclip is used to hang a string in the sugar mixture (if you don’t use a pencil or wooden skewer).

  4. suzanne_mangeri says:

    In the list of things needed, it mentions a paper clip. What is it for?

  5. arrowmakercpi says:

    I didn’t know I can make my own rock candy! Great!

  6. Aurora Lipper says:

    Please take a look at step 8. It shares details on how long the crystals take to grow.

  7. Aurora Lipper says:

    Any grocery store should have these supplies. Generic brands should be fine.

  8. suzanne_mangeri says:

    How long dose it take?

  9. suzanne_mangeri says:

    Where would be the best place to buy ingredients? And which brand is best?

  10. The water needs to be saturated with sugar. Otherwise, the crystals will be small…if they grow at all. So it is best to use the full 8 cups of sugar.

  11. leeann_brodeur says:

    Is it okay if we put in 4 cups of sugar? Or no?

  12. Crystals may start to grow anywhere along the portion of the stick that is submerged in the sugar-water solution.

  13. leeann_brodeur says:

    were does it start? i mean does it start to grow at the top or down?bye

  14. They will look like little crystals. The picture at 9 minutes 16 seconds into the video shares what they will look like after months of growth.

  15. leeann_brodeur says:

    how will it look like when it will grow?

  16. If you “seed” the stick, you should start to see growth within two day.

  17. leeann_brodeur says:

    …We had to put 4 cups of sugar in it…and 1 and a half cup of water in.How much weeks will it take it do grow?bye .

  18. Yes because they are sugar, it’s fine to eat these as long as you haven’t mixed anything else in with it. You can use food dye to color the crystals.

  19. leeann_brodeur says:

    to we eat the crastals ?or can we chance the colour?thank you!bye…

  20. 1) Yes, waxing part of the wooden rod may help prevent mold, but you should only put wax on the part of the stick that is outside of the sugar water mixture.
    2) Yes, crystals will most likely grow on any sugar “seeds” that fall from the wood rod.
    3) As long as you saturated the water with sugar, crystals should grow. But, remember that crystals can only grow on the portion of the rod that is submerged in the sugar water. So using a larger container means you’ll have to make a larger amount of sugar water.
    4) The mosquito was probable attracted to both the water and the sugar. Sugar is one of the ingredients in mosquito traps.

  21. morkthedork says:

    Hi. My daughter and I started this experiment on 8/25/21 and split the solution into 4 jars (2 larger and 2 smaller jars). On 9/14 we noticed 3 skewers were growing mold. That day, we replaced 2 skewers that were not growing crystals with freshly seeded skewers to see if crystals would form. 10/4 We noticed that all skewers were growing mold above the solution line and one jar had a mosquito in it (yuck!). Out of the 4 jars, two skewers grew crystals while all the others grew crystals on the bottom of the jar. The smaller jar had the most well defined crystals growing.
    My daughter’s (Zuri age 9) questions about this experiment :
    1) Do you think that waxing the tip of the wooden rod would help prevent mold from growing?
    2) Are crystals growing on the bottom of the jar due to the seeded sugar falling off of the wooden skewers?
    3) Does the size of the jar effect how well the crystals form?
    4) Do you think the mosquito was attracted to the sugar, the water, or both?

  22. Can I cut down the reicipe

  23. It depends on how long you leve your stick in! The longer you leave it, the larger your crystals will grow.

  24. How much dose it make?Zoya,age 93/4

  25. christina_andrist says:

    Hi! it has been two days and there is nothing on the stick what is wrong.

  26. It depends on what you use in your solution and the temperature it remains at. Borax (sodium tetraborate) takes only a few hours, but salt will take a month unless you add heat, then it’s only hours. Sugar is days to weeks, unless you heat it, then it’s faster. Also, if you don’t have a super-saturated solution, you’ll be waiting forever and no crystals will form. The solution has to be just right for crystals to start to form.

  27. misty_slayton says:

    how long does it take for it to be come a crystal

  28. Rock Candy Did I forget to show it? This is what it looked like.

  29. misty_slayton says:

    in your rook candy video why did you not sow what it lookd like???

  30. You can put as many as you want to, but the more sticks you put in there the more likely they are to run into each other and make one giant rock candy! You can do three separate jars, one for each child, and even use food dye to color them!

  31. o_Asterix says:

    Can you only put one stick in the jar?
    Can you put 3?
    I have three children.