Get creative this Easter with our fun crafts and activities for kids.
Easter is a wonderful time to get creative and crafty with your little ones. It’s also great for quiet-time activities that feed their minds while they build literacy and math skills. Our collection of Easter crafts and activities for kids is bound to delight and ‘eggs-cite’ children of all ages.
There are eggs aplenty to colour and paint, vibrant flowers and critters to cut out and decorate, baby birds and funny sheep to assemble, and lots of opportunities to practise their fine motor skills.
To help their reading and literacy skills bloom there are alphabet and sight word games, as well as creative writing ideas.
And what's Easter without an egg hunt? We share ideas on how to turn up the fun on the traditional Easter egg hunt. Kids can also put their counting skills to the test as they find the hidden eggs in our downloadable Egg Hunt activity.
We’ve included lots of free printables, as well as video demonstrations for the crafts.
Let’s hop to it!
Our Easter crafts are designed to develop fine motor skills in young children, while teaching them about colours, shapes and nature.
Even though the crafts are simple enough for preschoolers to make, adult supervision is needed.
Some of the crafts call for items that you might not want to use around toddlers and children under 3. Feel free to substitute those materials. For example, you might want to replace plastic googly eyes and buttons with circles of felt or paper.
Video demonstrations of all the crafts are available to watch in Reading Eggs Junior. If you don’t have an account, bookmark this page and then register for a 30-day free trial.
Watch video demonstrations of all the Easter crafts, as well as many other crafty activities, in Reading Eggs Junior. Free trial
This is a simple and fun craft that will get your child exploring shapes and colours while improving their fine motor skills in a creative way.
Materials You’ll Need:
Printable template (see link below)
Colored chalk
Removable tape
Craft paper (A3 or similar)
Child-friendly scissors
Glue
Water
Download the printable instructions and template
Watch the demonstration video:
Reading Eggs has cracked the code to make learning fun. Your kids will love the interactive games, colourful animations, catchy songs and eggs-citing rewards that help them learn phonics, sight words and other literacy skills. Start your 30-day free trial today!
This pom pom eggs craft is a perfect Easter activity. Using pom poms to paint is a fun way to help young children develop the motor skills they’ll need to grasp pencils and paintbrushes. It also helps develop shape recognition.
Materials You’ll Need:
Printable template (see link below)
Craft paper (A3 or similar)
Pom poms
Wooden pegs
Acrylic or washable paints
Child-friendly scissors
Glue
Download the printable instructions and template
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
The rainbow clouds craft is a tactile activity where little ones create a rainbow using simple household items. Not only will they discover the colours of the rainbow, you can use this craft to explore the weather with your child while they improve their fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
A paper plate
Cotton balls
Glue
Child-friendly scissors
Streamers or tissue paper in different colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, pink, purple
Ribbon or string to hang
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
The flower bunch craft is a delightful way to introduce a plant or seasonal theme to little ones (and your home). The cutting and pasting tasks in this craft improve fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
Craft paper (A3 or similar)
Wooden craft sticks
Cupcake liners in different sizes (small, medium and large) – you’ll need 3 per flower
A paper plate
Glue
Child-friendly scissors
Glitter
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
Reading Eggs has cracked the code to make learning fun. Your kids will love the interactive games, colourful animations, catchy songs and eggs-citing rewards that help them learn phonics, sight words and other literacy skills. Start your 30-day free trial today!
This is a fun craft that helps to improve fine motor skills using paint brushes and scissors. Kids can make a variety of sheep by mixing the white and black paints to make shades of grey or any colours they choose!
Materials You’ll Need:
Printable template (see link below)
Bubble wrap
Glue
White and black paints
Paint brushes
Plastic googly eyes (or substitute)
Child-friendly scissors
Download the printable instructions and template
Watch the demonstration video:
The pom pom caterpillars craft is a fun way of introducing colours, patterns and improving fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
A selection of colorful mini pom poms
Small plastic googly eyes – you’ll need 2 per caterpillar
A clothes peg for each caterpillar
PVA glue
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
Turn colourful cupcake cases into a caterpillar or butterfly! This simple activity is a fun introduction to all things bug related – explore the lifecycle of caterpillars and butterflies with your child. Additionally, this craft improves counting and fine motor skills in a fun way.
Materials You’ll Need:
Colorful cupcake liners (5 per caterpillar and 4 per butterfly)
Colored craft paper
Wooden craft sticks
Plastic googly eyes (or substitute)
Glue
Pom poms
Crayons
Stickers
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
The baby birds craft incorporates little handprints and makes for a wonderful keepsake to add to a craft wall. This craft encourages shape recognition and fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
Jumbo craft sticks – you’ll need 3 per bird
Yellow and orange craft paper
Decorative paper
Glue
Child-friendly scissors
Marker pen
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video:
This craft is a great addition to any nature or flower theme. With lots of cutting and threading, it's a fun and colourful way to improve children's fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
Printable template (see link below)
Colored felt sheets
Pipe cleaners
Buttons or beads with holes large enough to thread the pipe cleaners through
Cardboard tube (to use as a vase to hold the flowers)
Glue
Child-friendly scissors
Marker pen
Download the printable instructions and template
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
This fun hedgehog craft activity is perfect for keeping little ones busy. You can make this simple craft using everyday household items. It's good for scissor practice and to develop a child's fine motor skills.
Materials You’ll Need:
A paper plate
Light and dark brown paints
Paintbrush
A stapler or glue
Child-friendly scissors
Marker pen
Download the printable instructions
Watch the demonstration video (account required)
Reading Eggs has cracked the code to make learning fun. Your kids will love the interactive games, colourful animations, catchy songs and eggs-citing rewards that help them learn phonics, sight words and other literacy skills. Start your 30-day free trial today!
The classic Easter egg hunt provides an ‘eggs-cellent’ opportunity to practise reading and comprehension skills. Hide your Easter eggs around the house or in the garden and then write some fun clues on pieces of paper. For example, “I'm bound to get wet in the place I'm hiding” could mean the eggs are near the garden hose, in the shower, or in a sink; “You might find me admiring my reflection” (by the mirror); or “Flowery and green is where I can be seen” (hiding in a plant).
Hand out the written clues to your egg hunters and encourage them to help each other read and decipher each clue.
Download the Egg Hunt Counting Activity and have your child count how many eggs they can find hidden around Sam’s home.
Experiment with words that begin with the 'ex' letter combination that sound like 'eggs' in words, such as 'eggs-cited', 'eggs-plode' and 'eggs-perts'.
Provide a large, egg-shaped sheet of paper (you can use the template from the Chalky Egg craft above).
Have your child turn it into a character based on their preferred 'ex' word (e.g. ‘Mr Eggs-pensive’ or ‘Ms Eggs-pert’) by using crayons and other craft materials to create a face, hairstyle and outfit that matches their 'ex' word.
For example, ‘Ms Eggs-pert’ might be wearing glasses, holding a book and sporting an academic dress. ‘Mr Eggs-pensive’ might be wearing fancy clothes and expensive jewellery. Let your child create their egg puns and use their imagination to invent quirky new characters.
If they need some help, here are some ‘eggs-tra’ ideas: Mr Eggs-citable, Ms Eggs-plosive, Mr Eggs-tra and Ms Eggs-travagant.
Encourage your child to sit down and think about all the things they associate with Easter, such as eggs, the Easter Bunny and hot cross buns. Write a poem titled “When I think of Easter”, made up of three stanzas that include six lines each. Write the beginning of each line for your child and have them fill in the end by inserting specific words.
Begin the first line for your child with 'When I think of Easter, I think of' and have them write two special features of Easter. Then begin the following lines with prompts such as 'I see', 'I feel', 'I pretend', 'I wonder', 'I try' and so on. Close the poem by repeating the first line.
For younger children, try writing an acrostic poem by putting the letters in 'Easter' down the side of the page. Then go back to each letter and have your child write a word, phrase or sentence that begins with that letter to describe Easter.
Draw several medium-sized egg-shaped ovals on a large sheet of paper. In each oval, draw a zigzagged horizontal line in the middle to create a crack. You can use the template for the Chalky Egg craft activity as your egg or use some of the printables below.
On one side of each egg, write an uppercase letter and on the other side, write the corresponding lowercase letter. Cut each egg half out and scramble your eggs. Have your child pair each uppercase and lowercase letter. To save you time, we have a pre-prepared printable for this game:
For preschoolers learning sight words, each egg half can be used to pair sight words that go together. For example, ‘hop’ and ‘top’, ‘see’ and ‘bee’. Our printable includes 16 pairs (see link below).
For older children, you can mix and match compound words such as 'armchair', 'barnyard', 'nothing', 'racehorse', 'milestone', 'toothbrush' and 'wheelchair'.
Take some sheets of construction paper and create eggs by folding the paper then cutting out an egg shape (you can use the Chalky Egg craft template above). Make sure to keep one side folded so that the eggs can open like a greeting card. Then cut out a sizeable 'wreath' using a sheet of green construction paper.
Inside each egg, have your child write an Easter wish, such as “Help a friend”, “Talk to grandma” or “Make hot cross buns”. Decorate the front of each egg using crayons, magazine clippings or glitter. Attach the eggs to your wreath and hang it up on the wall.
Download the Decorate Reggie Coloring Page and have your child add some color and bling to everyone’s favorite egg.
Reading Eggs has cracked the code to make learning fun. Your kids will love the interactive games, colourful animations, catchy songs and eggs-citing rewards that help them learn phonics, sight words and other literacy skills. Start your 30-day free trial today!