Fizzing sidewalk chalk paint turns your driveway into a bubbly, colorful science lab kids can paint! It’s quick to set up, wildly satisfying to watch, and an instant favorite for sunny play days.

- Make fizzing sidewalk chalk paint with kids today
- Why this fizzing sidewalk chalk paint is a win
- Materials
- How to make fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
- Everyone wants to know…“Does this stain?”
- The science behind fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
- Extensions for fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
- Frequently Asked Questions
Make fizzing sidewalk chalk paint with kids today
If you love projects that mix art and science, this one is “soda-lightful.”
Kids whip up paints, brush them onto the ground, and then vinegar brings the fizz.
Consider this your go-to DIY chalk paint recipe when you want fast set-up, big smiles, and a whole lot science fun!
✨ Check out our ultimate collection of the best process art projects for kids!

Why this fizzing sidewalk chalk paint is a win
This DIY sidewalk paint uses pantry staples you likely already have, so you can say yes to play in minutes.
BUT, if you don’t have the ingredients on hand, they’re easy and inexpensive to find at any big box or grocery store.
Plus, cleanup is simple, and the colors look gorgeous both wet and dry.
☀️ There’s more outdoor fun where this came from:

Materials
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- Baking soda
- Water
- Small paint cups, bowls, or a muffin tin
- Liquid watercolors, food coloring, or washable kids’ paint
- Spoons or craft sticks for stirring
- Paintbrushes – the thicker and fluffier the better
- White vinegar in a spray bottle
- Sidewalk or driveway that can get wet and colorful

How to make fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
- Set out several small cups and add 2–3 tablespoons of baking soda to each.
- Add a splash of water (just enough to create a thick, brushable paste) and stir. If it’s too soupy, add more baking soda; if it’s too crumbly, add a bit more water.
- Tint each cup with liquid watercolors or food coloring and mix.
- Invite kids to paint the sidewalk with paintbrushes.
- Now the magic: hand each child a spray bottle of vinegar and let them spray the art. When the vinegar meets the baking soda, the CO₂ bubbles pop to life.
- Keep painting and spraying in cycles. You can wait until paint dries for a crackly fizz or spray while it’s wet for foamy fireworks.
- When finished, rinse the area with a hose or a bucket of water. Let the sun do the drying.

Everyone wants to know…“Does this stain?”
A quick heads-up before you fizz: color can cling differently depending on surface type (new or unsealed concrete, porous pavers, rough aggregate). Always spot-test, keep a rinse bucket handy, and hose the area well when you’re done.
- Food coloring
- Bright, concentrated pigments; highest chance of lingering tint on porous or unsealed concrete.
- Liquid watercolors
- Ultra-vibrant and fluid; medium staining risk on typical sidewalks. Usually lifts with a strong hose stream, especially if you rinse while artwork is still damp.
- Washable kids’ paints
- Designed to rinse away; lowest staining risk on most pavement. Great choice for concrete you’re cautious about.
General tips
- Test a small, inconspicuous patch first—especially on new, sealed, or decorative surfaces.
- Work in shade when possible; hot sun can “set” pigments faster.

The science behind fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
Let’s chalk, I mean talk, about science!
Baking soda is a base, and vinegar is a mild acid. When they meet, they create carbon dioxide gas and that’s the fizzy foam you see and hear.
Kids can observe cause and effect, compare “wet fizz” vs. “dry fizz,” and notice how color spreads as bubbles burst.
Add vocabulary like reaction, base, acid, carbon dioxide, and solution while you play.

Extensions for fizzing sidewalk chalk paint
- Draw simple line art first, then “activate” only certain sections with vinegar to make selective fizzing highlights.
- Use stencils, painter’s tape shapes, or cardboard letters to create resist designs before spraying.
- Try a “fizz portrait”: paint a face outline, then let the bubbles add wild hair texture “fizz-tastic!”
- Turn it into an easy chalk activity obstacle course: paint arrows, hopscotch numbers, or “lava” paths and spray each checkpoint.

Frequently Asked Questions
Most colors rinse away easily, but always spot-test on new, sealed, or porous surfaces and hose off when you’re done + check the section about staining above.
Aim for a thick yogurt texture that clings to the brush and sidewalk without running.
Nope! Pipettes, droppers, squeeze bottles, or even gently pouring vinegar from a cup all activate the reaction.












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