Easter Crafts for Kids
Fuzzy Friends
Present Pointers
You may want to consider buying extra pompoms for this fun and easy project: Glue pompoms onto an old glove to make puppets. Design a different animal for each finger. A great last-minute gift!Time frame: Half to one hour
Level: Easy
What you need:
- One bag of assorted pompoms (Be sure yellow, white, and orange pompoms are included in the assortment, or buy them separately.)
- Tacky or fabric glue
- Scissors
- One piece each of yellow, orange, white, and pink felt
- Bag of plastic eyes
- Pack of pipe cleaner that includes orange
- Bag of plastic hollow Easter eggs (the ones that snap apart)
- For the bunny: Glue two white pompoms together. Cut two hind legs and two bunny ears out of white felt. Glue these to the pompom body. Glue two small eyes to the head.
- For the chick: Glue two yellow pompoms together. Cut a triangular beak out of orange felt and glue it to the face. Glue on two plastic eyes. Use an orange pipe cleaner for the feet: Make a circle out of the middle of the pipe cleaner and glue it to the bottom pompom. Bend the ends of the pipe cleaner into two circles. Pinch the circles in half to form "V" shaped feet.
- For the duck: Glue two white pompoms together. Glue a smaller orange pompom on the mouth area. Cut feet out of orange felt and glue them to the body. Glue two eyes onto the head.
- Place your pompoms in hollow, snap apart, plastic Easter eggs. Put the Easter eggs and leftover supplies in a gift basket and present it to the kids on your list.
Papier-Mâché Easter Eggs
If you don't mind a little mess, papier-mâché is a relatively easy medium for creating unusual homemade items. These handcrafted Easter eggs filled with goodies will brighten up any Easter basket.Time frame: Two to three hours plus overnight to dry
Level: Moderately easy
What you need:
- Newspapers
- Five-inch balloon(s)
- Shallow bowl
- 3⁄4 cup flour
- 1⁄2 cup water
- Small wrapped candies
- Masking tape
- Colorful craft paints
- Paintbrush
- Clear acrylic finish spray
- Cover your work area with newspapers or a plastic tablecloth.
- Decide how many eggs you want to make and blow up the balloon(s). Tie a knot in the end(s).
- In a shallow bowl, make a paste from the flour and water. The paste should be thick enough to thoroughly coat a piece of newspaper without dripping off. If the paste is too runny, add more flour; if it's too stiff, add more water.
- Tear or cut a newspaper into one-inch strips. Dip the strips into the flour mixture and run your fingers down the strip to remove excess paste. Paste the strip onto the balloon in a vertical direction, going from the knotted end to the top and back down again. Repeat this process until the balloon is covered. Do not cover the knot of the balloon. Keep a one-inch "hole" in this area to insert the candies. Next add strips horizontally until the balloon is covered with a 1⁄4-inch layer of newspaper. Press the strips to the balloon and rub a layer of the paste over the top to smooth any wrinkles. Allow the egg to dry overnight.
- When the egg is dry, carefully pop the balloon and pull it out through the hole. Fill the egg with wrapped candies and seal the hole with masking tape.
- Paint the egg with colorful craft paints and allow it to dry. Spray the egg with clear acrylic finish spray and allow it to dry thoroughly. The kids could keep the egg to reuse as a decoration for Easter by carefully removing the tape to get to the candies, or they could crack the egg open by hitting it against a hard surface (such as concrete).
Read more on FamilyEducation: http://fun.familyeducation.com/easter/gifts/45237.html#ixzz1rVwdH900
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