'Magic Coral', Sodium Silicate Questions

I bought a ‘grow magic coral’ kit. It says in the instructions that the special solution is sodium silicate. It does not say what the starter ‘magic rocks’ are. The directions are for growing the ‘coral’ on an included plastic tree thing. I want to know if instead of doing that, I can get the coral to grow on a ceramic Cthulhu statuette I made. The idol in question is fired, unpainted, unglazed clay. I also want to know how hard it will be to get the ‘coral’ of the idol if I don’t like the way it turns out. I also wonder why so much of my life seems to revolve around Cthulhu. But that’s for another thread.

Oh, I already know not to ingest the sodium silicate, and to avoid contact with skin.

The colored rocks are just chucks or irregular crystals of other, somewhat soluble, heavy metal salts. Such salts are often brightly colored. The whole point is, the outer layer becomes a silicate salt of the heavy metal, which partly flakes off, and the the exposed surface builds, flakes off, and so on.

Now, if you want a porous item to become crystal encrusted, there’s another game to play. How to Grow a Charcoal Crystal Garden

I was going to add that we had done it with charcoal back in elementary school. Looks like your link is likely the method we used – I remember the ammonia and the bluing.

Thanks, Arkcon!

So, if I want to use my statue as a base I have to buy more stuff. This leads to a few more questions-

Can I just use the kit I have and glue the resulting crystals on Cthulhu? Do I have to worry about some reaction between Gorilla Glue and the crystals? What can I coat the crystals in to waterproof them?