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Fun Easter Egg Hunt And Creative Craft Ideas And Activities For Kids On Easter

Easter is a holiday that you can spend with your family, especially with your kids. The Easter egg, craft ideas, kid’s activities are some of the enjoyable things that you can do with them. For ideas on Easter eggs, you can buy cute little wooden eggs from the near crafts store and paint them using acrylic paint or use colorful glitter paint to make them more dazzling. These painted eggs will make an excellent Easter decoration in your house. You can display them in a basket or display them individually with your children’s names written on each egg and the year they were made.

For craft activities with your children, you can still do the dyeing of eggs. This is a traditional activity during Easter and this activity is also fun. Now, there are many available egg dye kits for easy and safe dyeing of eggs. You can also make your own homemade dye by mixing hot water, food coloring, and a tablespoon of vinegar (preferably white). If you are going to write names, create designs, and draw pictures, just use crayon (white wax) before dyeing them and leave them in the dye longer to create a much deeper hue.

Another Easter Egg, craft ideas, kid’s activities’ idea is making egg cookies and decorating them. You can design egg-shaped cookies, or flower cookies, or bunny cookies, and more by buying these shapes of cutter. Decorate your cookies with variety of colors using sprinkles, frostings, chocolate chips, M&Ms, and other small candies or chocolates.

Then, you can also make Easter cards with your kids. This is a very enjoyable craft for the kids. The children can make cards from construction paper or card stock and then decorate them with their drawings of eggs, bunnies, lambs, chicks, or flowers. They can also use stickers and glitters to accessorize more the cards. These cards are great gifts for their friends, family, relatives, and teachers too and these are very economical.

Other Easter egg, craft ideas, kid’s activities crafts include annual family traditions. Some families will simply create long lasting memoirs of both parents and children. Parents will record the search of their children for Easter eggs or take pictures and videos while they were making their crafts. Some families also set their reunions on this day and videotape the occasion for keepsake for the years to come.

So, this coming Easter, what are the activities you have planned for your family?

Check out Easter Egg for more crafts and ideas or visit us at Easter Decorating Ideas

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Fun easter craft and food Ideas?

I’m looking for fun easter ideas for my family.
Like food or craft ideas or anything in between! Just be sure it’s fun and easy. I would also like it if u gave me a website.

Thanks a lot!
Thanks you guys so much 4 answering my questions. Still open for more!

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What are some easy/simple Easter kindergarden crafts?

My sons teacher asked if anyone knows of some simple Easter crafts to do at school. I am looking for ideas that don’t require me to go out and buy lots of craft supplies maybe using more house hold items that people usually have.

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What’s a good Easter gift for kids that isn’t candy or toys?

I have a 5 year old niece & a 3 year old nephew and I have no idea what to get them for Easter.

I’m thinking something smaller, like $10-20 each. They have MORE than enough toys and dolls, and they don’t watch a lot of TV. They like to do crafts with their mom, so if you can recommend some kind of craft kit that would work for those ages, that might work.

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Fun Easter Celebration Ideas

Easter is a celebration of rebirth both spiritually and physically. It is a spring holiday that welcomes in new growth and flowering. Trees are budding, flowers are slowly blooming, lawns are greening and the days grow longer. The dark and cold of winter give way to a new optimism filled with sun, warmth and cheer. The religious origins of Easter are an integral part of the Christian holiday but do not preclude people of all faiths to celebrate the more secular side of this holiday. There is plenty to enjoy as the bunnies, chicks, children’s baskets filled with candy and family gatherings present another side of Easter. So no matter your beliefs, we can all celebrate the new awakenings that happen each year with the onset of springtime.

I always love Easter dinner. I keep it simple by buying or ordering a honey baked ham. Add some yummy scalloped potatoes, a colorful jello mold filled with fruit and some fresh roasted or sautéed vegetables and my menu is set. I also do Easter as a buffet. Some times we have brunch, other years it is an early dinner depending on everyone’s schedules. No matter how much you try to avoid it, Easter is an all day sugar festival for the kids so it is always best to have your dinner earlier than later. Let them eat something of substance before they fill up on all the Easter candy.

When the kids were smaller, we always enjoyed making Easter favors for everyone. Sometimes we did small plants or flowers, decorated the pot, added the recipient’s name with paint marker, wrapped it in ribbon and added in some dyed and decorated eggs that we had made together. These could be set around the table as placeholders too. Decorating the eggs was an event in itself. There are so many creative egg decorating kits at the stores. So you can dye, paint, stamp, sticker, glue and even draw on eggs! The key is to keep this event age appropriate. It takes all the fun out of the project if they can’t do it themselves or what they make looks terrible. So make sure your egg decorating activity will meet the age criteria.

An egg hunt is also a popular Easter tradition. In our family, we never hid the eggs. We hid the baskets. Easter morning would have the kids running around the house to find their baskets. Our family tradition happened later in the day when all the cousins and friends were over for dinner. We would follow the Easter Bunny Trail. The kids would be all over the neighborhood finding the clues that the Bunny had left. Like Hansel and Gretel’s trail, the Bunny left a trail of clues would lead the kids to the ultimate Easter Basket with goodies for one and all. Rain or shine, adults and kids would all be out there together chasing the Bunny and his clever clues. It was truly such a fun tradition, that when the kids were in high school, we actually did it for all their friends. It was a huge success. Just goes to show that you are never too old to celebrate Easter!

There are more great ideas for Easter recipes, decorations and an easy how to tutorial on making cake balls, the perfect Easter dessert as well as sample clues to help you stage your own Bunny Trail Hunt at Celebration Ideas Online.com.

Carol is married with four grown children whose family loves to celebrate everything! Her favorite hobby now that the kids are all on their own or off to college is her web site: Celebration Ideas Online, a resource center for fun family celebration ideas. Great ideas for college care packages too.

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Easter Craft ideas for kids?

Any websites and ideas???

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175 Easy-To-Do-Easter Crafts: Easy-To-Do Crafts, Easy-To-Find Things

  • ISBN13: 9781563973161
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
A delightful craft book for children integrates simple directions and colorful photographs to offer everything needed to make clever projects that celebrate spring, from Victorian eggs and bunny puppets to simple jewelry and egg-carton tulips. Original…. More >>

175 Easy-To-Do-Easter Crafts: Easy-To-Do Crafts, Easy-To-Find Things

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DIY Groovy Mod-style Easter Eggs are Over Easy

This Easter, create egg-ceptional colorful mod-style Eaters eggs with simple tie-dye and tissue-paper techniques. Decorating Easter eggs has never been easier or less messy than with traditional food-coloring dyes. This project is perfect for art class or to do at home with the kids.

Hands-on time: About 45 minutes per dozen.

Total time: if using vanish, add two hours for drying time.

Skill: Easy, great project for children. (teacher & classroom friendly).

Cost estimate: Only pennies per egg.

Materials & Tools

•Hard-boiled eggs

•Newspapers

•Tea-lights (bases only)

For tie-dye Easter eggs:

•Wax crayons (I recommend Crayola brand, they have the best pigmentation)

•Crayon sharpener

•Small disposable paper plates

•Egg carton container

•Elastic bands (optional)

For tissue-paper Easter eggs:

•Small bowl of water

•Craft tissue paper in assorted colors

•Scissors, to cut out geometric shapes (optional)

•A flat paint brush

•Mod-Podge medium, brush on varnish

Egg safety:

Store eggs in refrigerator until you are ready to use them. Place the eggs carefully in a large pot and add cold water to completely cover the eggs. Over medium heat bring the water to a boil. Cover the pot and turn off the heat. Let the pot sit on the element for 15 minutes, then run the pot of eggs under cold water until the shells are cool and place the eggs in the refrigerator. (Skip the cooling step for the tie-dye egg project).

Tie-dye Easter eggs:

Cover your work area with newspapers. Choose two to three wax-crayon colors, and then sharpen shavings over a small paper or foil plate. (Plastic or Styrofoam plates will melt when they come in contact with the warm eggs). Make a separate plate for each color combination. For example, make a plate with yellow, green, and blue shavings and another plate with pink, purple and orange.

When the hard-boiled eggs are still warm, roll them into the crayon shavings, turning them around a few times. To cool, place the eggs on a tea-light stand or back in the egg carton. The colors will continue to blend and melt together; watch the display of colorful swirls unfold.

Placing elastic bands around some of the eggs before decorating them will create stripes. The unique results will simply amaze your family and friends.

Tissue paper Easter eggs:

Place a small bowl of water (jar lids can also be used) and several squares of tissue paper on your work area. Place eggs on tea-light stands. Scissors can be used to cut out assorted geometric shapes (hand-torn pieces are just as effective).

With a paint brush, dampen the egg and then place many tissue paper shapes over the egg, one at a time, overlapping and moistening as you go. When the egg is fully covered, let it stand for a few minutes.

You now have two options:

1. Remove the tissue paper before it completely dries and you now have enchanting marbleized eggs with the look of egg-dying without using egg dyes.

2. Apply Mod-Podge medium with a paint brush directly onto the still-humid, tissued eggs and let stand to dry. You can apply vanish if you wish once it is completely dried.

You now have very groovy colorful Easter eggs ready for a hip décor theme.

Tips

•You can also decorate the above Easter eggs with hollow eggs. Poke a small hole with a clean pin or small nail, in the narrow end of a raw egg, make a slightly larger hole at the other end. Hold the egg over a bowl and blow through the small hole. The egg’s liquid should slowly seep out of the opened end. Rinse the eggshells carefully and set aside to dry. Make scramble eggs or a quiche with the egg-yolks.

•Be sure to keep the decorated eggs refrigerated until you are ready to hide them or make your centerpiece decorations. These are decorative eggs, they are not meant for consumption.

•Should you dye your eggs with traditional or natural food dyes, I recommend wearing plastic gloves to avoid dying your fingers. Eggs decorated with non-toxic coloring dyes are the only eggs you can eat, but not if they are cracked or have been out of the refrigerator for more than 2 hours.

Variations:

•Other egg-cellent ideas and variations: marbleized, striped, sponge painted, speckled, mosaic, pearlized, glazed, decoupage, waxed, batik, antiqued or crackled. Try to decorate some with basic items you can find around your home: sequins, rubber stamps, ribbon and lace remnants, sparkles, glitter glue, tiny seed beads, pasta bits, metallic and regular and felt pens. With a wax crayon, draw a picture like a flower or bunny, write names, or words on the eggs before dying them.

•To keep eggs as decor accents throughout the year, try painting wooden, plaster, rock, or paper maché eggs. To give them an aged look, sprinkle with a dash of salt or flour and squirt with water, let dry, then seal with varnish.

To view more make-it-yourself colorful photos of these Easter egg creations and for more Home and Garden decor projects by Madeleine M Langlois visit www.miycreations.com

maddy@maddylane.com

www.maddylane.com

www.miycreations.com

About the Author:


Madeleine has over 25 years design experience. She studied fashion merchandising and design. The fist part of her career was spent in the fashion industry designing ladies and children’s wear to fashion accessories. Maddy then went on to design giftware products, Christmas decorations, packaging concepts as well as illustrating for Canadian companies. She has even published a bilingual children’s book that she both wrote and illustrated. Maddy’s designer talents, from fashion to decor and her love for crafts has directed her to produce and write ?how-to? step-by-step d?cor articles. For the last five years, Madeleine has been creating innovative home decorative d?cor items for her weekly syndicated ?make-it-yourself? Miy at home articles. Maddy work has is presently featured in Magazines and newspapers.


For more ?Miy? articles and a more detailed artist bio, I invite you to visit my; www.maddylane.com

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DIY Groovy Mod-style Easter Eggs are Over Easy

This Easter, create egg-ceptional colorful mod-style Eaters eggs with simple tie-dye and tissue-paper techniques. Decorating Easter eggs has never been easier or less messy than with traditional food-coloring dyes. This project is perfect for art class or to do at home with the kids.

Hands-on time: About 45 minutes per dozen.

Total time: if using vanish, add two hours for drying time.

Skill: Easy, great project for children. (teacher & classroom friendly).

Cost estimate: Only pennies per egg.

Materials & Tools

•Hard-boiled eggs

•Newspapers

•Tea-lights (bases only)

For tie-dye Easter eggs:

•Wax crayons (I recommend Crayola brand, they have the best pigmentation)

•Crayon sharpener

•Small disposable paper plates

•Egg carton container

•Elastic bands (optional)

For tissue-paper Easter eggs:

•Small bowl of water

•Craft tissue paper in assorted colors

•Scissors, to cut out geometric shapes (optional)

•A flat paint brush

•Mod-Podge medium, brush on varnish

Egg safety:

Store eggs in refrigerator until you are ready to use them. Place the eggs carefully in a large pot and add cold water to completely cover the eggs. Over medium heat bring the water to a boil. Cover the pot and turn off the heat. Let the pot sit on the element for 15 minutes, then run the pot of eggs under cold water until the shells are cool and place the eggs in the refrigerator. (Skip the cooling step for the tie-dye egg project).

Tie-dye Easter eggs:

Cover your work area with newspapers. Choose two to three wax-crayon colors, and then sharpen shavings over a small paper or foil plate. (Plastic or Styrofoam plates will melt when they come in contact with the warm eggs). Make a separate plate for each color combination. For example, make a plate with yellow, green, and blue shavings and another plate with pink, purple and orange.

When the hard-boiled eggs are still warm, roll them into the crayon shavings, turning them around a few times. To cool, place the eggs on a tea-light stand or back in the egg carton. The colors will continue to blend and melt together; watch the display of colorful swirls unfold.

Placing elastic bands around some of the eggs before decorating them will create stripes. The unique results will simply amaze your family and friends.

Tissue paper Easter eggs:

Place a small bowl of water (jar lids can also be used) and several squares of tissue paper on your work area. Place eggs on tea-light stands. Scissors can be used to cut out assorted geometric shapes (hand-torn pieces are just as effective).

With a paint brush, dampen the egg and then place many tissue paper shapes over the egg, one at a time, overlapping and moistening as you go. When the egg is fully covered, let it stand for a few minutes.

You now have two options:

1. Remove the tissue paper before it completely dries and you now have enchanting marbleized eggs with the look of egg-dying without using egg dyes.

2. Apply Mod-Podge medium with a paint brush directly onto the still-humid, tissued eggs and let stand to dry. You can apply vanish if you wish once it is completely dried.

You now have very groovy colorful Easter eggs ready for a hip décor theme.

Tips

•You can also decorate the above Easter eggs with hollow eggs. Poke a small hole with a clean pin or small nail, in the narrow end of a raw egg, make a slightly larger hole at the other end. Hold the egg over a bowl and blow through the small hole. The egg’s liquid should slowly seep out of the opened end. Rinse the eggshells carefully and set aside to dry. Make scramble eggs or a quiche with the egg-yolks.

•Be sure to keep the decorated eggs refrigerated until you are ready to hide them or make your centerpiece decorations. These are decorative eggs, they are not meant for consumption.

•Should you dye your eggs with traditional or natural food dyes, I recommend wearing plastic gloves to avoid dying your fingers. Eggs decorated with non-toxic coloring dyes are the only eggs you can eat, but not if they are cracked or have been out of the refrigerator for more than 2 hours.

Variations:

•Other egg-cellent ideas and variations: marbleized, striped, sponge painted, speckled, mosaic, pearlized, glazed, decoupage, waxed, batik, antiqued or crackled. Try to decorate some with basic items you can find around your home: sequins, rubber stamps, ribbon and lace remnants, sparkles, glitter glue, tiny seed beads, pasta bits, metallic and regular and felt pens. With a wax crayon, draw a picture like a flower or bunny, write names, or words on the eggs before dying them.

•To keep eggs as decor accents throughout the year, try painting wooden, plaster, rock, or paper maché eggs. To give them an aged look, sprinkle with a dash of salt or flour and squirt with water, let dry, then seal with varnish.

To view more make-it-yourself colorful photos of these Easter egg creations and for more Home and Garden decor projects by Madeleine M Langlois visit www.miycreations.com

maddy@maddylane.com

www.maddylane.com

www.miycreations.com

About the Author:


Madeleine has over 25 years design experience. She studied fashion merchandising and design. The fist part of her career was spent in the fashion industry designing ladies and children’s wear to fashion accessories. Maddy then went on to design giftware products, Christmas decorations, packaging concepts as well as illustrating for Canadian companies. She has even published a bilingual children’s book that she both wrote and illustrated. Maddy’s designer talents, from fashion to decor and her love for crafts has directed her to produce and write ?how-to? step-by-step d?cor articles. For the last five years, Madeleine has been creating innovative home decorative d?cor items for her weekly syndicated ?make-it-yourself? Miy at home articles. Maddy work has is presently featured in Magazines and newspapers.


For more ?Miy? articles and a more detailed artist bio, I invite you to visit my; www.maddylane.com

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Fun and easy spring and easter crafts?

I’m in 6th grade and i wanr some fun easter and spring crafts.i love doing crafts but i can never find any good ones.what are some fun crafts that don’t take a LONG time and can be used from household items?

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