

🌈 Unlock the spectrum of creativity and curiosity with every crystal-clear beam!
The Young4us 2 Pack 6-inch Crystal Optical Glass Triangular Prisms are precision-crafted equilateral prisms designed to split light into vivid spectral colors. Perfect for photography, educational demonstrations, and creative projects, this set offers two durable yet delicate optical glass prisms that bring science and art together in a visually stunning way.










| ASIN | B08H51PV9F |
| Best Sellers Rank | #43,995 in Toys & Games ( See Top 100 in Toys & Games ) #17 in Prisms & Kaleidoscopes |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars (616) |
| Item Weight | 12 ounces |
| Item model number | BL-SLJ-X2 |
| Manufacturer | Young4us |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 0 - 12 years |
| Package Dimensions | 7.72 x 4.45 x 1.65 inches |
J**N
These prisms create a great spectral display of the sun
I tutor a 14 year old boy in the eighth grade. His science class is very weak so I purchased these prisms to illustrate refraction of sunlight. I stood with the Sun behind me, put the prism over my shoulder and directed the spectral display onto the shadow in front of me. It was beautiful- Violet, Blue , green,yellow, red. Note- these things are glass and the corners are very fragile. Don't just toss them around they will chip easily.
D**K
Prisms are fun to play with
2 high quality glass prisms that are fun to play with. Make rainbows or make periscopes. Or build your own mad scientist optical lab for fun.
J**H
Great tool for photography 🌈!
I used a glass prism to refract the sunlight and disperse this intense rainbow 🌈 onto my clear quartz elongated alien skull. 💗 💡 Easy to use and educational for examining basic properties of light, especially refraction (Snell's law) for glass and air combined with dispersion. Output color is as vibrant as shown if using sunlight. Great value and quality for money, since the product shipped in perfect condition.
P**.
Instructions ??
I wish the had included some brief instructions. If the sun isn’t shining it’s hard to get it to make a rainbow. I thought we could make a rainbow with a bright flashlight. Cool science lesson.
R**S
Non uniform optical properties
I bought these to see if they would be good for teaching about prisms. Particularly about refraction of light. But if you look at the reflection of a line, or look through the prism at a straight line. (I used the edge of the white background on this screen) you will see that the whole is curved and not straight. The colors spread out as they should - but the whole line is curved - STRONGLY. So I think they took hot glass and forced it into a mold at the lowest temperature possible. Then polished the surface. So what happens (pretty sure) is the optical properties change from one end of the prism to the other. These are CHEAP. They have the right shape. They are clean. They will more or less refract single rays of light and spread out a beam of light for verbal demonstrations. Would this be a good starting point for any quantitative experiment - I don't think so. Unless you were teaching modeling and calibration. Then, the fun is taking a really badly made device (a prism is an optical device) - measure it, model everything, and then use the computer to standardize the poorly made device. Use measurement and computers to fix the too quick way they made this. I think all they need to do is heat the glass to a higher temperature, and be careful to cool it uniformly. I think these guys sell short prisms. I will see if the short ones are not so distorted. Such a curvature could come from strain left in the glass. But it can be a slowly varying index of refraction. If you were teaching gradient index things, it might be a good example. Ask the students to use the gradients for something practical. Hold the prism in two hands with the triangular shape pointing up. Look through the top (thin part) of the prism at the bottom of the computer screen. Slowly lift the prism until you can see the bottom of the screen. The line of your eye through the prism will be pointing above the screen. It should be fuzzy with the colors spread out. Notice how strongly it curves from one side of the prism (right to left, left to right) Hold the prism vertically, and turn it slowly around the vertical axis. Look for an image of the edge of the screen. It should have vivid colors. BUT it won't be a straight line. In mine, the apparent distance of the "straight" edge of the screen from long axis of the prism changes from top to bottom and is also curved. Wish I could show you. Will see if I can find a camera somewhere. Richard
J**W
Good Quality Prisms
My preschooler and I enjoy experimenting with these. The prisms are good quality and arrived promptly. They are also a nice size and easy for little ones to hold.
R**A
Broken
Came broken. Disappointed
B**L
Major Win!
My kid loves being able to see the rainbow with these.
G**.
Good and heavy - robust
T**F
Bought to use for experiments in the Physics unit with my Grade 8 class. Great quality for the price. Prisms refract sunlight well and all students were able to see a rainbow.
M**C
J'ai acheté ces triangles pour jouer avec la lumière pour des prises photos en studio avec une lampe de poche. Il faut savoir que cela ne fonction pas avec une source de lumière LED. Il faut utiliser une lampe de poche avec des ampoules incandescentes pour avoir les effets de lumières escomptés. Les articles sont arrivés neuf et en bon état.
M**N
It does what it is supposed to. Not as impressively as others, but it’s great bang for your buck.
S**M
They work wonderful and are as advertised. However the shipping method for them is pretty lack luster. They came in these flimsy cardboard boxes and one of my prism ended up chipping. Because I'm using these for a classroom I cannot let kids handle or maneuver the broken one.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 weeks ago