Colour Wheel Spinner Toy.
Spinners are great toys, they spin at very high speeds with little effort from your hand movements.
It gets even better when we make them educationally important, yes, we can use them to teach colour mixing in a fun way.
Here we'll learn to make colour wheel spinners with items almost always already lying in a pupil's school sets.
Supplies
1) Small piece of cardboard.
2) A drawing sheet.
3) Crayons
4) A paper tape
5) A pencil
6) A ruler
7) Blade or a pair of scissors
8) A compass.
9) Super glue or gum.
10) 45cm length thick thread.
11) A flat pan or any other metallic surface
12) A source of heat. (microwave, stove etc.)
13) A small drew driver or nail.
Cutting the Cardboard.
Take a blade or scissors and cut out the circular cardboard.
Cutting the Drawing Sheets.
Drawing Colour Sections on the Two Drawing Paper.
Measure the radius of the circle, divide it into three and mark out the division along the eight radii of the circle. For mine, the radius was 3.6, so I measured 1.2 from the circumference and marked it, measured the next 1.2 (making 2.4) and mark it, measured the last 1.2 (totalling 3.6) which falls at the centre of the circle.
Use a compass to draw two circles from the two marked points on each radii, now we have three compartments in each of the eight sectors in the circular paper.
Do this for the second paper, too.
Colouring!
Using the three primary colours, red, blue and yellow, we'll produce the three secondary colours, purple (blue+red), green(blue+yellow) and orange(red+yellow).
Take the metal pan and heat it to a temperature high enough to melt crayons on contact (you need to be careful handling it), take one of the circular papers and tape it to the pan. For each of the circle section (outer, middle and inner), colour it with crayons as shown in the picture i.e for the outer section, blue and red in alternating patterns through the eight boxes. For the middle section, blue and yellow in alternating pattern through the eight boxes. For the innermost/center circle, yellow and red in alternating pattern through the eight boxes.
Do this for the second sheet.
Note: To colour, start colouring from the centre of each box, once you place the tip of the crayon at the centre of a box on the paper, the heat from the pan will melt the crayon unto the paper and make it spread, be careful how much crayon you melt into each box so it doesn't extend into other boxes.
You may need to use the tip of a pencil to spread the melted crayon into the corners of each box.
Note: From the pictures, I initially coloured the paper ordinarily with crayon, but it was too light on the paper to work well.
Sandwiching the Spinner.
Adding the Thread.
Finally!
Conclusion.
Note: The first GIF (on the left) was recorded in poor lighting.