Chic Macaroni Necklaces For The New Generation
WHAT YOU NEED
- Large plastic bags or glass jars; isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol); food coloring in various colors (liquid or gel); dry pasta in various shapes (we used ditalini
- fiori
- mezze penne
- mezze rigatoni
- and ziti); paper towels; string
- yarn
- thin rope
- or elastic thread; scissors; tape
- To a plastic bag or glass jar, add 1 tablespoon alcohol and the food coloring (about 10 to 15 drops of liquid or one good squirt of gel). Shake until mixed.
- Add the pasta. (Our penne necklace has a total of 35 pieces of pasta; the longest ditalini and fiori strands used 120 each.) Don’t fill the bag completely; you should leave some room so that you can easily shake the pasta and coloring together.
- Shake the bag until all the pasta is covered.
- Let the pasta sit until it reaches the desired color, 3 to 10 minutes. (For extra-dark colors, you can leave the pasta in the coloring in a glass jar—not a bag—for up to 8 hours.) Shake the bag every few minutes to keep the alcohol and coloring mixed.
- Once you have your color, remove the pasta and place it on a paper towel to dry. The pasta will dry quickly (in about 5 minutes).
- Repeat with other pasta shapes and colors.
- Now it’s time to string. First knot one end of the string around a small piece of pasta to avoid losing the pasta as you add each piece. Wrap the other end of the string with a piece of tape to make it easier to get the string through the pasta pieces.
- Once you’ve strung to the length you want, tie the ends together. Molto adorable.
- Warning: Food coloring can stain countertops, clothes, and little (and big) fingers. Paper towels, aprons, and rubber gloves are all wise precautionary measures.
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