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Star Recipes
From A Tale in the Desert
Jump to navigationJump to searchMaterial Costs of Squat Canary and Flying Frog are based on T3 data, please confirm.
Stars are built in a Star Rack
Also see Pyrotechnics Guides and Portable Star Lab
For this table, please use the cost of producing a batch of TEN (10) Stars
Star Name | Star Type | Region | Binder | Sulfur | Charcoal | Salt | Aluminum Powder |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Squat Canary | ?? | Common | Cactus Sap (13) | Sulfur (3) | Charcoal (15) | Aluminum (9) | none |
Flying Frog | ?? | Common | Cactus Sap (15) | Sulfur (5) | Charcoal (10) | Zinc (6) | none |
Silver Trail | ?? | Shabbat Ab | Cactus Sap (14) | Sulfur (4) | Charcoal (48) | Silver (29) | ? |
For Star Type, please use one of the following:
- Pulsing - these have a strong glow on the first star, and usually leave a simple trail. There is considerable variability in the size of the star, and the length of the trail. The basic frog and canary designs are this type.
- Cone (comets) - Have a strong glow at the front, and diffuse into a short 'cone' shape.
- Bomb (poppers) - these are often hard to see, since they fly their lifetime unignited, and then explode at the end. Single poppers are useful as near-invisible platforms for delivering other stars, while showers of many poppers can be an impressive finale.
- Trail ("Thin Red Line") - long thin trails of light, often used for spirals and geometric shapes.
- Sparkler - these are typically crowd favorites. They leave a shower of sparks as a trail, usually but not always in the same color as the head of the star.