Colour
Chameleon
A challenge badge for all sections by 46th Glasgow
Guide Company
Registered Charity Number SCO35079
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Welcome to Colour Chameleon!
Let us start by saying thank you for downloading our challenge pack. We hope you have as much fun completing it as we did creating it!
The challenge is made up of 4 parts:
1. Colourful Creations 2. The Science of Colour 3. Colourful Games 4. The Meaning of Colour
To complete the badge you should complete a minimum of six age appropriate activities from a variety of the sections.
To help you choose your activities, each page includes the Promise Badge for the sections the activity is recommended for. Please feel free to adapt the activities to suit your unit.
Please email us with estimated badge requirements as you start the challenge – this will help us to manage our badge stock levels and should mean we have badges when you need them!
If you have any activities of your own you would like to share please email details to us at [email protected] and we will include in future updates.
Thank you for your support,
46th Glasgow Guides
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Colourful creations
Crayon Melts
You will need:
Wax crayons in various colours
A sharp knife
A mixing bowl
Silicon fairy cake trays (or other shapes if you can
find them)
Coloured card
Glue
Method
1. Chop up wax crayons into chunks and mix together in bowl. (Do not grate or flake the
crayons as you will not get the desired effect.)
2. Fill moulds with crayon mix. Bake in a very hot oven (230 C) for 15 minutes. Don't worry
if it looks a bit of a mess at this point!
3. Once cooled (you may need to leave it till next week if doing this on a unit night), take
out shapes and mount onto card petals using a glue gun or other strong glue.
If you can find heart shaped moulds, why not create Valentine hearts with a special message
on your mount?
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Crayon Pictures
You will need:
Canvas frame
Wax crayons
Glue gun
Heat gun or hairdryer
Method
1. Glue wax crayons onto the top of the canvas using a glue gun.
2. Holding the canvas upright, melt the crayons using a heat gun or hairdryer. Make sure
you stop before they drip off the bottom of the canvas.
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Clothes-peg Chameleons
You will need:
wooden clothes pegs
glue
white card
felt tip pens or colouring pencils
red paper
Method
1. Copy template onto thin white card and colour your chameleon in bright colours.
2. Cut out the template into two pieces.
3. Glue the top part of the chameleon onto the top of a clothes peg. Then glue the
bottom part onto the bottom of the clothes peg (make sure they line up).
4. Cut a small strip of red paper and roll it up. Glue the end to the clothes pin where
the chameleon's tongue should be.
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Paper Chameleons
You will need:
scissors
1 x A4 coloured card, 2 x 1/4 A4
coloured card
Extra coloured card/paper for tongues and eyes
glue
pen
sticky tape
Method
1. Fold a piece of A4 card in half lengthways.
2. Draw a diagonal line from one corner at the folded edge, to the opposite corner on
the open edge. Cut this line and keep aside the 'non folded' edges.
3. Fold the edge of the paper to the centre on both sides. Open the shape so it
becomes a triangular shape with an uneven edge (this is where you will stick the
head to).
4. Open the side fold but keep the middle fold down - you should be able to see the
fold lines.
5. Make cuts to the folded line on the fold side, cutting through both layers of paper.
6. Open the folds and glue the two uncut sides of paper together.
7. Cut out some legs from your 'non folded' extra bits and glue to the bottom.
8. Take a 1/4 of a piece of A4 paper. Fold over the short side and cut off the excess to
make a square.
9. Open the square and fold in the opposite direction to make a crease in the shape of
an "X".
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10. Cut one of the lines of the X to the centre point. Fold over the triangle to the
adjacent triangle and glue into place. This should give you a pyramid shape.
11. Repeat steps 8 - 10 above, then tape the two pyramids together. This is your head.
Draw eyes on the outside of one of the pyramids.
12. Cut a length of pink or red card and roll to make a 'tongue'. Tape or glue to the
middle of the mouth.
13. Attach the head to the uneven edge of your chameleon's body.
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Coloured Sand
You will need:
Salt
Food colourings
Zip lock bags
Clear jars
Method
1. Pour a cup of salt into a zip-log bag.
2. Add 10-15 drops of food colouring.
3. Squish the bag until the salt is covered evenly.
4. Leave the bags for a few hours until dry (or until next week).
5. Layer different colours of sand in a glass jar to make a lovely gift.
Or: Use the sand to make a picture by swirling glue onto paper and sticking on your
sand.
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Bubble Painting
You will need
Washing up liquid
15 drops of bright food colouring
1/2 cup of water
straws
white A4 card
Method
1. Mix together a squirt of washing up liquid with the water and food colouring.
2. Blow into the mixture using a straw until you have a huge pile of bubbles.
3. Gently press the card onto the bubbles allowing them to pop on the paper.
An extra challenge: Can you make a collage using your bubble paintings in different
colours?
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Shaving Foam Marbling
You will need
Shaving foam
Food colouring or paint
2 x baking trays
A butter knife or similar to mix
Ruler
Card
Method
1. Squirt some shaving foam onto the baking tray. Mix the foam with the knife until you
have covered the whole tray.
2. Using a ruler spread the shaving foam so you have an even layer on the tray.
3. Drop 1 drop of each food colour or paint on the shaving foam, making sure they are
evenly spread out.
4. Using a stick or toothpick swirl the shaving foam to spread the colour in streaks across
the foam.
5. Lay the card on the shaving foam and gently press into the coloured foam mixture.
6. Peel off the card and place on a clean baking tray. Using the ruler wipe off the shaving
foam leaving the colour behind on the card.
7. Place your card in a safe place to dry.
What can you make with your marbled card?
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Paper Plate Rainbows
You will need
Cotton wool
Coloured ribbon - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple
Paper plate
Scissors
Glue
Craft knife (optional)
Method
1. Fold a paper plate in half and cut along the fold.
2. Cut slits into the paper plate in a fan leaving about 1 cm at the top edge and making sure
the slits don't join each other at the bottom.
3. Weave the red ribbon through the slits (over one section, under the next) and push to
the edge of the plate.
4. Repeat with the orange, yellow green, blue and purple ribbons in that order. Make sure
that you alternate the starting sections of the ribbons so you get a weave effect.
5. Once you have woven all the ribbons, trim one end to leave about 15cm length. Trim
the other end so that it is even with the paper plate.
6. Clue the ribbons on both sides of the plate to make sure they stay in place.
7. Fluff up 1 or 2 cotton wool balls and glue onto the plate, covering the short edge ribbon.
8. Punch a hole at the top of the rainbow and tie a piece of ribbon through the whole so
you can hang up your rainbow.
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Colour a Flower
You will need
A colour of paint.
Black and white paint
Flower worksheet (appendix 1)
Method
Chose ONE colour. Pain an unmixed sample into circle B. Add white to your colour and use
the mix to paint circle A. Lastly ad black to your original pure colour and use the mix to
paint circle C.
Use the colours you have mixed to paint the flower as realistically as you can.
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Stained Glass Rainbows
You will need
Black paper or card
Coloured tissue paper
Glue
Scissors
Method
1. Cut 'windows' in the black paper in the shape of a rainbow.
2. Stick tissue paper onto the back of the windows.
3. Hold your rainbow to the light so see the colours!
Design a Butterfly
You will need
Paint, coloured pens or pencils.
Attached template printed onto white card/paper
Method
Using the attached template, design a beautiful butterfly using as many colours as you like.
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Colourful Cupcakes
You will need
150g (5 oz) lightly salted butter, softened
150g (5 oz) caster sugar
175g (8 oz) self-raising flour
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Assorted food colourings
Icing sugar to decorate
Mixing bowls – enough to separate out the colours
Wooden spoons (or electric whisk, if you’re cheating)
Cake cases
Method
Makes 12
Cooking time: 20 minutes
1. Pre-heat oven to 180○C (350○F), gas mark 4.
2. Line a baking tray with 12 cake cases.
3. Put all the ingredients (except the food colouring) in a bowl and beat until light and
creamy.
4. Divide the mixture into separate bowls and colour using the food colouring.
5. Divide the mixture between the cases.
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6. Bake in oven for 20 minutes of until risen and firm to the touch.
7. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.
8. Decorate.
9. Eat.
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Pom-pom bookmarks
You will need
Wool
Scissors
Method
1. Wrap wool around your 3 middle fingers 90-100 time.
2. Cut the wool off and ease gently off your finger.
3. Cut a separate piece of wool around 12-15 cms.
4. Tightly tie the wool around the middle – do it a couple of times just to be sure.
Remember to leave enough wool for the tail of your bookmark.
5. Cut the loops of wool.
6. Fluff out into the shape of a pom-pom.
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Rainbow Button Bracelets (1)
You will need
Buttons in the colours of the rainbow
Elastic sewing thread or thin round elastic (this will depend on size of holes in the
buttons)
Method
1. Thread elastic through buttons in sets of Rainbow colours until long enough to go round
wrist. If using elastic sewing thread you may need to go through all again to make it
strong enough.
2. Tie the ends of elastic in a knot joining ends making a circle for wrist.
Rainbow Button Bracelets (2)
You will need
Buttons in colours of the rainbow
Thin round elastic or thin cord (this will depend
on the size of holes in the buttons)
Method
1. Take a folded length of elastic or cord long enough to pass through both holes on button
lying flat plus about 1-2 cm (enough to make a loop which will go over the end button)
2. Fold elastic or cord in half and make a loop big enough to go over the first button.
3. Begin to thread both the elastic or cord lengths through the buttons passing both
lengths through each button, either in a straight pattern or criss-cross pattern.
4. When both lengths have been through all the buttons tie the two ends together in a
knot.
5. Pace around wrist and pass the looped end over the first button to secure.
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Rainbow Button Necklace
You will need
Buttons in colours of the rainbow
Length of ribbon or cord or thong (any width as long
as it will go through the holes in the buttons)
Method
1. Begin to thread the ribbon through the buttons passing through two holes so the
buttons lie flat.
2. Knot the ribbon or cord or thong before the first button and after the last button so they
do not slide off.
3. Tie round neck.
Single Colour Button Necklace
You will need
Buttons in colour of choice
Length of ribbon or cord or thong in same or
contrast colour (any width as long as it will go
through the holes in the Buttons)
Method
1. Begin to thread the ribbon or cord or thong through the buttons passing through two
holes so the buttons lie flat.
2. Knot the ribbon or cord or thong before the first button and after the last button so they
do not slide off.
3. Tie round neck.
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Letter Mobile
You Will Need
Coloured Card
Pieces of dowel or garden cane or plastic rod
String or thread
Method
1. Cut out large letters, either all one colour or each
in a different colour
2. Make or punch a small hole in uppermost part of letter
3. Take 2 pieces of dowel/cane/plastic rod and fix together in X shape with string or strong
thread
4. Tie each letter to a piece of thread or string using different lengths
5. Tie each string/thread to ends of cane and one from the cross in the middle
6. Tie a piece of string from the cross to hang.
Options
Try using letters could be in person’s name or spell the colour if using only one.
Try gluing coloured buttons to the letters or sprinkling with glitter
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Letter Pictures
You Will Need
2 Pieces of card, any colour
PVA glue
Buttons/tissue paper in one colour
Method
1. Draw a letter in the middle of one piece of card
2. Cover letter area with glue
3. Put buttons/tissue paper onto glue to cover letter shape
4. Cut out centre of 2nd piece of card large enough to see letter below.
5. Glue ‘frame’ card over base card.
Options
Pieces of coloured paper or material could be glued to letter shape
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Letter Wall Hanging
You Will Need
Piece of material about A4 size, rectangle or square
Buttons in colour of choice
2 pieces dowelling/cane/plastic rod
String or strong thread for hanging
Sewing needle, scissors and thread in appropriate colour
Method
1. Draw out a letter onto the material.
2. Hem all round making a channel at the top and bottom to insert a piece of
dowelling/cane or plastic rod.
3. Sew buttons on over letter area
4. Put dowelling/cane/plastic rod into channel top and bottom
5. Tie string or strong thread to both ends of top dowel/cane/rod and hang
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The Science of Colour
Homemade Blusher
You will need:
beetroot powder
corn flour
cocoa powder (optional)
small bowl
spoon
make up brush (to apply)
Method
Mix 2 tbs of beetroot powder to 1 tbs of corn flour in a small bowl, making sure you break
apart any clumps. Add a little cocoa powder to make it a little darker or a little more
beetroot powder if you want to make it brighter.
Make a Rainbow
You will need
Red, Blue and Yellow paint
Paper
Method
Can you paint a rainbow, showing all the colours of the rainbow but using only the three
primary colours.
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Colour Spinners
You will need
White card, cut into circles
Red, Blue, Green and Yellow felt tip pens.
Pencil
Method
Divide the card into quarters. Colour each quarter a different colour.
Push the pencil through the middle and spin the wheel like a spinning top. Look closely -
how many colours do you see? Does it make a difference how fast you spin it?
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Tasting Colours
You will need
Lemonade
Food colouring
Method
Mix a few drops of food colouring into a jug of lemonade. Repeat with 2 different
colours. Ask girls to taste each drink and decide what flavour each is.
Once you have revealed the 'true' flavour, discuss with the girls why they think that
they thought they were different flavours.
Why not add some food colouring whilst cooking spaghetti and ask the girls what flavour
the spaghetti is?
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Absorbing Science
You will need
Water
Clear plastic container with low sides
Coloured pens
food dye
plastic cups
paper towels (thicker paper towels work best)
Method - Experiment 1
1. Make some dots using pens on the bottom of a sheet of paper towel.
2. Fold the top of the paper towel over the container so that your coloured dots are inside
the container, but not resting on the bottom.
3. Slowly pour in water so that it just touches the bottom of the paper towel.
4. Watch carefully as the water slowly makes it way up the paper towel towards the
coloured dots. When the water reaches the tot the colour starts to rise! This is because
the towel is absorbing the water and taking the ink with it.
Method - Experiment 2
1. Fill a plastic cup with some water and add a few drops of food colouring.
2. Roll up some paper towel and place one end in the cup with the water, and the other in
an empty paper cup beside it.
3. Watch as the coloured water travels up the paper towel and makes its way into the
empty cup so that both cups have the same amount of water.
Method - Experiment 3
1. Fill 2 cups with water. Add blue food colouring to one cup and yellow food colouring to
the other.
2. Put an empty cup between the two paper cups.
3. Roll up 2 paper towels: place the end of one towel into the blue dye and one end of the
other into the yellow cup. Put the other end of both towels into the empty cup. Watch
as the water makes its way into the empty cup and creates green water.
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The Meaning of Colour
Who is your colour?
Chose a colour and imagine they are a person. What are they like? What is their
personality? Create a poster showing your colour as a person and share it with the rest of
your unit. Why do you think we associate different things with different colours? (e.g.
Red=angry, Blue=peaceful)
Colour around us
Did you know that T.V. programs are 'graded' to bring out certain colours. For example, the
colour blue is highlighted in 'The Apprentice' as this is the colour of business. Over the week
look out for different T.V. shows and the colours that appear most in them. Discuss the
shows you have chosen with others in your patrol or unit and what colour themes appear.
What do you think the program makers are trying to highlight?
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Colour in nature
Animals use colour to act as a warning, to camouflage or to give a message. Choose and animal and research how it uses colour. Make a poster to share with your unit, showing how the animal uses colour.
Colour tribes
People use colour as part of a uniform and to associate them with a certain group of people.
For example football teams, guide uniform.
Gangs also use colours to show that they are members of the same gang. Why do you think
they do this? Discuss the impact of what colours can mean to people both in the same 'unit'
or a different. How can this create problems?
Colour Blindness
Some people suffer from colour blindness which affects their ability to distinguish between
different colours. Is there anyone in the unit who suffers from this? What kind of
difficulties will they face in everyday life? Consider, for example, the colours in traffic lights,
food and drawing. Can you think of any ways which might help someone who suffers from
colour blindness?
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Adding Colour
You will need
Black and white photos (e.g. from newspapers)
Coloured pencils or felt tip pens.
Method
Look at a selection of black and white (from e.g. newspapers). Discuss as a
patrol/group what colours you think are in the photos.
Try “colouring” the photos with pencils or pens – can you all agree on the colours to
be used.
Compare your coloured picture with another group/patrol – what differences are
there?
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Colourful Games
Rainbow Ladders
This game is a glorified race – divide the girls into teams of 5 or 6 ( you can play with more
or less though) and line them up at one end of the hall.
We usually put a chair or something similar at the opposite end of the hall for them to run
round.
You are going to tell a story of an artist painting a picture - give the girls each a name – so
the first person in each team might be ‘Blue’, the second ‘red’, someone might be ‘brush’ –
ie name one person in each team after something you are going to say repeatedly while
telling the story.
As you tell the story every time you use the word that a child is named after they have to
run round the chair and then back to their place – the first team to be back wins the point.
If you use the word ‘Easel’ or another word chosen by you the whole team has to run
Obviously much more fun if you repeat the same name time and time again so the girls end
up exhausted!
I would start along the lines of :
Mr Colour, the artist decides to paint a picture. He sets up his easel
(everyone runs) attaches his canvas to the easel (everyone runs) and then
chooses a brush (if someone is called brush they run). He decides to paint
the sky blue (person called blue runs), so puts his brush (brush runs) in
the blue (blue runs) paint etc. etc. – let your imagination run away with
you – doesn’t matter if the story is totally silly.
We also play basically the same game telling the story of Ma Brown making a pot of lentil
soup (the girls are called after the ingredients and every time I say pot or basket they all
run), or making a Christmas cake!
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Coloured Steps
This is again a team race.
Everyone needs a partner and they should sit in two lines facing their partner with their legs
stretched out so their feet are touching their partners feet. Tell them to sit on their fingers
and ensure that there is a good gap between each ‘rung’ of the ladder the unit should have
formed.
Instead of numbering the girls give them all a colour – so number one is blue, two is red,
three is yellow etc. You then simply call out one colour at the time and the girls have to
‘run’ down your ladder ( jumping over each individual set of legs – hence why they should
be spaced out) and then run back up your hall to the top of the ladder, where they should
jump over any remaining legs from the top of the ladder until they are back in their place.
First girl back and seated correctly get the point for her team
Fruit Salad
Put all the chairs in a circle and give each girl a colour (each colour should have about 4-5
girls).
Remove one seat.
The girl without a seat stands in the middle and calls out a colour, all the girls who have that
colour need to change seats with each other and the girl in the middle also has to try to get
one of the seats. One person will be left without the seat and chooses the next colour
If you want all the girls to change seats call out "rainbow".
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Colour Tag
Pick about 4 people to be 'taggers'. Set boundaries (you want an open space ie: school
gym).
Call out a colour (everyone wearing red for example) and then everyone wearing that colour
(or can do patterns, ie: stripes, plaid etc) has to run across. If they are tagged, they sit out.
If the caller calls out: "color tag" then everyone runs. If the caller calls out "energizer" then
everyone sitting out can rejoin in the game.
Word-search
Print out the word-search attached. How quickly can you find all the words?
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a r r a i n b o w e
g r e e n e a r t d
f r d e d e r a s f
n u g u i d i n g h
f h u e g a s g t r
y e l l o w s e u a
u b m a r e n i s i
b l a c k e n d e n
r u i n d w e d n a
o e v i o h l e y t
w o r b v i o l e t
n a r u h t d g e j
y d e l y e w c d e
Can you find the colours of the rainbow?
Red
Orange
Yellow
Green
Blue
Indigo
Violet
Rainbow
r a i n b o w
g r e e n r
d d a
i n
g g
y e l l o w e
b
b l a c k
r u w
o e h
w v i o l e t
n t
e
PAINT A FLOWER
1. Chose ONE colour. Pain an unmixed sameple into circle B. Add white to
your colour and use the mix to paint circle A. Lastly ad black to your original
pure colour and use the mix to paint circle C.
2. Use the colours you have mixed to paint the flower as realistically as you
can.
A B C
CHAMELEON TEMPLATE
BUTTERFLY TEMPLATE
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G43 2QZ
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