You need only a little of the salts to color the flame, since the color comes from vaporized metal ions. The color would need to be re-applied multiple times since it generally only lasts a few minutes. Soaking pieces of wood of pinecones in a strong solution of the desired salt and then drying before adding to the fire will give you the longest lasting color since more will be exposed as the wood/pinecone burns away. An impressive display of the possibilities can be done by taking roughly two parts (by weight) copper sulfate pentahydrate (tree root killer) and one part table salt, dissolving them in water and boiling down to dryness in a container you won't be using for food again in the microwave. You will have a mix of brown and white salts that is a combination of anhydrous copper sulfate, anhydrous copper chloride, copper oxychloride, sodium sulfate, and sodium chloride. This mix is powdered and sprinkled onto a bed of hot coals in a fire, turning a good portion of the flames blue-green for a short time (quite short). I realize this procedure is very unscientific, and much purer products could be produced, but for a demonstration, it will work. Ideally, you would calculate the exact amount of chemicals needed, chill the mixed solution and filter out the sodium sulfate crystals that form, then evaporate slowly to dryness and finally extract all of the copper chloride out of the mix with acetone or dry alcohol, but that is unnecessary right now. In pyrotechnics (which this is a super mild form of) it is often extremely difficult to predict reaction products since weird stuff can happen with high temperatures and unpredictable conditions. If you just avoid any really toxic metals, you should be fine. Most organic material will be reduced to carbon dioxide and water. Although chlorides, sulfates, and nitrates will release hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid anhydride, and nitrogen oxides, respectively, the quantities you will be using shouldn't pose much of a threat unless you 1: eat the salts 2: have no ventilation (ie. the fire you are coloring is actually your furniture. You will be fine with a fireplace or campfire.) or 3: intentionally inhale huge quantities of the smoke. I've gotten too many facefuls of ammonia gas, xylene vapors, and sulfur dioxide fumes to worry about quantities of burning salts on the order of a few grams, but being careful is always good.