| 1 | Mix the dish detergent with the water. |
| 2 | (measure carefully, it makes a big difference. |
| 3 | Stir. |
| 4 | Add the glycerine (you can usually get this in a drug store), this makes more durable bubbles. |
| 5 | You can bend a wire coat hanger into a circle and wind a string around it. |
| 6 | Depending on how big you make your circle, you get great big bubbles. |
| 7 | The string helps in getting the liquid to stay on the circle. |
| 8 | You can also use straws and string-tie a 2 ?foot length of string though two straws and unleash square bubbles . |
| 9 | The trick is to dip your string and straw thing into the solution and wave it in the air. |
| 10 | Break the bubble off by flipping the apparatus up a bit. |
| 11 | Plain straws make good bubble pipes. |
| 12 | Also try using the plastic strawberry baskets, they make lots of little bubbles. |
| 13 | It is fun to experiment with all different bubble makers. |
| 14 | Big-time bubble making is a bit like fishing. |
| 15 | You"ll have much better luck in cool wet weather. |
| 16 | Early evenings, nighttime and early mornings are often good. |
| 17 | Just after a rain is ideal. |
| 18 | Don"t throw any leftovers away, the longer it sits the better it becomes. |