Guaranteed Safe Checkout

Best Quality Color Container for Holi - 2 KG

Rs. 1,999
Rs. 2,999
Tax included.
-- people are viewing this product right now
Quantity: Pack of 1
Estimated delivery: ---- (5–7 days)

Guaranteed Safe Checkout

Description
  • PRODUCT - Holi Color Spray Cylinder is a Holi gadget that spray Gulal coloure powder in the air.
  • MATERIALS AND QUALITY - High-quality natural and herbal colours with a lovely fragrance. Safe ingredients are used to provide great quality.
  • HOW TO USE- Holi Spray Cylinder Colour is a simple product to use. Pull the trigger and the colour cloud will appear in one go.
  • SAFE- Holi Spray Cylinder Color Gadget is light weight, kid-friendly, eco friendly, and non-toxic comes with great quantity color.
  • This Holi Spray Cylinder color is perfect for photoshoots, video production, digital photography, weddings, and maternity shoots.
0+
Happy Customers
0
Years in Business
0%
Customer Satisfaction Rate
0+
Exclusive Products

Have a Question? Look here

So grass is green because it contains chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is needed to provide the process of photosynthesis and convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, while obtaining energy for plant life. And it is with the process of photosynthesis that the green color of chlorophyll is associated.

Most scientists believe that inside the Sun one chemical element - hydrogen turns into another - helium. Hydrogen particles are combined into heavier particles, with this combination, energy is released in the form of light and heat.

The white color of snow is caused precisely by its structure. In ice, all crystals are strictly aligned and oriented. Light, therefore, passes through ice with only a slight change in direction. Snow, on the other hand, has ice crystals arranged randomly. As a result, light falling on one of them, in a refracted form, falls on the other, which again changes its direction. Moreover, snowflakes are even capable of decomposing white light into color spectral components - but as a result, all this gives exactly white color.

The Sumerians were the first to divide the sky into twelve "windows" and group the stars about five thousand years ago. It was they who endowed each constellation with an expressive symbol and name and compared it with the events of the surrounding nature. Later, the ancient Greeks borrowed the idea of the “zodiac” (literally, “a circle of animals”) from their descendants from Mesopotamia and attributed a charismatic legend to each sign.