Try this:
Make a solution of starch in water. I have some concentrated laundry starch handy that is convenient (although it is horribly contaminated with awful perfumes
). After diluting this a bit, I added a drop of iodine in ethanol. (Tincture of iodine ought to work as well.) The result is a dark blue, almost black, solution.
Then I took a small spatula of ascorbic acid (vitamin C), and dissolved this in water. Upon adding this to the starch/iodine (with a little swirling), the dark color goes away, as the ascorbic acid reduces I2 to colorless I-.
When I did this just now, the resulting solution wasn't *perfectly* clear, it was a little bit cloudy and pinkish, I'm not sure why. (I didn't take any care to get any amounts right, I probably had lots more starch and ascorbic acid than I needed.) It is certainly a dramatic enough change, though.
The phenolphthalein will work too, changing from magenta to clear upon adding acid. (Assuming you started with a basic solution.) Thymolphthalein will do the same, but going from blue to colorless. o-cresolphthalein supposedly will also change from red to colorless, I'm not sure how the color compares to phenolphthalein. If you happen to have m-nitrophenol (I don't, hard to get for an individual), that changes from yellow to colorless. With the set of indicators, you could make a change from any-color-you-like to colorless.