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Stacy Conradt
The Quick 10: 10 Fireworks Effects to Watch For
by Stacy Conradt - July 3, 2008 - 1:48 PM

Maybe I’m not a fireworks connoisseur, but I had no idea there were so many different types of effects and I definitely didn’t know they had names. To me, their names are, “The Ones That Do That Shooty Thing,” “The Ones That Scream” and “The Ones That Kind of Sparkle Out”. Very technical. If you’re like me, here’s a mini-lesson for you – try to spot them at whatever fireworks display you attend this weekend. I don’t usually do pictures with the Quick 10, but thought this post kind of warranted them.

10 Fireworks Effects to Watch For

1. Peony. This one is apparently the most common, so your chances of spotting it in the skies this weekend are pretty good. It’s “a spherical break of colored stars”.

2. Chrysanthemum. This is a variation of the Peony – the difference is that the stars leave a visible trail of sparks. To me, this looks like a fiber optic ball or those balls that you put your hand on to attract the current to at science museums and the life.
mum

3. Willow.. I love this one! It’s a lot like the Peony and its variations (the Chrysanthemum and the Dahlia), but it leaves trails of silver or gold stars that produce a weeping willow-ish outline.
willow

4. Horsetail. It’s a compact little burst that falls down down, well, like a horsetail. You might also hear this one referred to as a Waterfall Shell. waterfall

5. Fish. I love these too. The shell bursts and then you see little squiggles of light squirming away from the main burst. The effect looks like fish swimming away. Or sperm. Whatever.

6. Spider. This one is fast-burning and bursts very hard, which makes the stars shoot out straight and flat. Basically, the look like lots of spider legs. spider

7. Palm. This one produces an effect that looks like a palm tree when it bursts (go figure). Some even have a thick tail that looks like a trunk.
palm

8. Crossette. Take lots of tic-tac-toe boards and cross them over each other haphazardly. That’s kind of what the crossette looks like and it’s usually accompanied by a loud crackling noise.
cross

9. Kamuro. Named after a Japanese hairstyle, this one has a dense burst that leaves a glittery trail.
kamuro

10. Rings. I like these because they can be arranged to look like atoms, which is very mental_floss-y. But typically you see rings within rings, like the ones in the picture.
rings

For more fireworks effects and help on spotting them, take this quiz on the PBS site. Oh, and for you Muppet enthusiasts from yesterday, don’t worry - I will do a Muppet follow-up next week.

Shhh…super secret special for blog readers.

Comments (6)
  1. Thanks for this! It will certainly help me to decipher the things, here in Scotland (where the guns are illegal all of the time, and fireworks are legal year-round no matter how old you are).

  2. On Canada Day, I saw some fireworks that I’d never seen before. The rings were one of them.

    I really like the ones that burst into a ball of colour (or I guess a peony… often orange) which quickly disappears to leave some sparkly white stardust that shimmers before disappearing..

  3. There is a variant of the Rings effect that creates a big smiley face. Amazes me that they are able to control things well enough to do that.

  4. For years, my dad and I have named the types of fireworks each year. Some get the same names each year, others we forget and have to come up with new names every year. The one you have here, named the Fish, we call a chaseabout, and when the off-shoots make that high-pitched noise they make as they fall, they become whistling chaseabouts (those are my favorite).

  5. I always called the horsetails “hippie hair.” :)

  6. I saw a weird one this year. It was like a ball of fire. At first, I thought it was a dud, but they did a few like that in a row. It was much louder than the regular fireworks, and it just made this ball of very bright reddish-orange flame. It kinda freaked everyone out. It was a bit too bomb-like.

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