Players can also add materials such as mob heads, diamonds, feathers, glowstone dust, gold nuggets, and fire charges while creating a firework star to add extra effects.
If a dye is combined with a firework star after it’s created, a “fade” effect can be produced that allows the colors to shift. Up to eight dyes can be added to a firework star for this shifting effect.
Types of dyes and how to craft them
When creating dyes, there are tons of options in Minecraft. Below is a list of dyes and what they can be crafted from:
- White dye – Created from bone meal and Lilies of the Valley
- Light grey dye – Created from combining black and white dye, white and grey dye, or crafting it from Azure Bluet, Oxeye Daisy, or White Tulip flowers.
- Grey dye – Made from combining black and white dye.
- Black dye – Obtained from ink sacs or Wither Roses.
- Red dye – Obtained from Poppies, Red Tulips, Rose Bushes, and Beetroots.
- Orange dye – Obtained from combining red and yellow dye or crafting it from Orange Tulip flowers.
- Yellow dye – Crafted from Dandelions or Sunflowers.
- Lime dye – Created by combining green dye and white dye or by smelting sea pickles in a furnace.
- Light blue dye – Crafted by combining blue and white dye or using a Blue Orchid.
- Cyan dye – Made by combining blue and green dye.
- Blue dye – Crafted by using Lapis Lazuli or Cornflowers.
- Purple dye – Made by combining red and blue dye.
- Magenta dye – Created via combining: pink + purple dyes, red + blue + white dyes, pink + red + blue dyes, or crafting it with Allium or Lilacs.
- Pink dye – Created in Minecraft by combining red and white dyes or by using Pink Tulips or Peony flowers.
- Brown dye – Crafted from cocoa beans.
- Green dye – Created smelting cactus blocks in a furnace.
Also Read
Additionally, in Minecraft: Bedrock and Education editions, items such as bone meal, ink sacs, Lapis Lazuli, and cocoa beans can be substituted for the dyes they are typically made from (ie. using Lapis Lazuli in place of blue dye).
Edited by R. Elahi
