Self-grown copper-sulfate crystal
This copper-sulfate crystal was grown because crystals are beautiful: a clear blue object with flat faces, sharp angles, and a color that looks almost artificial even though it comes from an ordinary chemical solution. The goal was aesthetic rather than utilitarian — to make a small piece of ordered matter that could be held up to the light.
Growing a good crystal still requires patience and care. If the solution crystallizes too quickly, many tiny grains form and the result becomes cloudy or irregular. Slow growth rewards a cleaner process: choosing a seed, keeping the solution clear, and letting material add to the same structure over time. The finished crystal had transparent blue facets and a clean geometric form, close to the elegant parallelogram-like shape visible in the original photos.