Wednesday, April 16, 2025
Simple Washi tape eggs . . .
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
How to dye a 'Teddy bear' egg
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Teddy Bear Easter egg for little ones taking a break next to a very hungry caterpillar! |
To make the coffee dye simply boil several tablespoons of instant coffee and white vinegar on the stove with a cup full of water. Then soak the mixture along with either a hard-boiled egg or one that has been blown out in advance overnight. To get a rich chocolate brown color the egg must be left in this mixture for over twelve hours!
Then hot glue on a few fuzzy pom-poms for the ears and nose and other facial features...
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Left, a blew out the contents of my brown egg through two holes, one at each end of the egg. Right, then I soaked the egg in a coffee dye over night in order to get the rich dark brown you see above. |
Monday, April 14, 2025
How to shape a 'crown of thorns' for Easter displays and egg trees!
To make this small crown of thorns for an egg tree you will need the following supplies: five or six chenille stems, cotton balls, white school glue, acrylic paints (brown and pink).
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Unravel the cotton balls, for this small crown I used approximately five of these.
- Squeeze a fine line of white school glue down several inches of the edge of a chenille stem.
- Wrap the cotton batting fuzz about the glue covered area of the stem tightly with the tips of your fingers. Proceed down the stem with this method until all the it's length is covered with cotton batting.
- Repeat step 3 several times.
- Now twist the stems together in a random loops to make a twig looking crown.
- Cut and twist a thorny looking hook somewhere on the crown form for hanging.
- For the last two stems, cut small sections of one stem and twist these onto two other chenille stems to look like thorns.
- Twist the thorny stems about the crown and set it aside to dry.
- Once dry the crown of thorns may be painted with brown acrylics. I added touches of pink and purple glitter sparingly to the painted brown stems too.
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Left, the original cotton batting version of a crown of thorns for the Easter egg tree. Right, a painted crown of thorns painted to look like real ones. |
The Crown of Thorns:
Friday, April 11, 2025
Craft Speckled Easter Eggs!
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Supplies for making speckled eggs. |
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Boil the number or eggs of your own choice in a pot of water.
- Once the eggs have boiled for 10 minutes, let them cool slightly in that water and add a couple of Tablespoons of white vinegar to that same water.
- Now fill each plastic bag with about 1/2 cup of rice. You will need a bag for every color you wish to make.
- Add four to five drops of food dye into one bag of rice along with a warm egg (in shell).
- Seal the plastic bag carefully and then shake it's contents together until the desired degree of speckle is transferred to the egg.
- Repeat the steps for each color separately.
- You may repeat the process by coating the eggs with multiple colors and you may continue to add dyes to the rice to intensify the speckling.
- Toss the rice out when you have finished.
- Keep your eggs refrigerated until you are ready to eat them for Easter brunch.
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See our speckled eggs in white, green, red and blue. |
A crafty way to transform egg designs into baskets...
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Egg shaped baskets hang from a early blooming pink dogwood tree. |
To make eggs like these you will need the following supplies: a paper egg pattern, light weight cardboard, scrapbook papers, embroidery floss, white school glue or tacky craft glue, wire for hanging and straw flower embellishments.
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Swipe a flat paper egg pattern to your desktop and then print it out from your home computer/ laptop.
- Cut out the size you need and then transfer it to cardboard.
- Form the handle of the egg shaped basket by removing the top half of the egg shaped cardboard cut-out.
- Repeat steps two and three, excluding the handle.
- Glue together the two bottom halves to form an open shallow pocket for the egg shaped basket.
- After the cardboard basket is completely dry, cut from plaid scrapbook papers and decoupage these images onto the lower sections of each basket.
- Smear more glue onto each handle and then carefully wrap colorful embroidery floss around the handles of the baskets.
- Paste straw flower embellishments inside of the shallow basket cavities.
- Wrap on a wire hook to hang these egg shaped baskets onto Easter egg trees.
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Left, cut-out the cardboard pieces, Center, double up on the lower basket to paste two together. Right, decoupage plaid scrapbook paper onto the lower halves of each basket. |
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Refinish an egg with a feather or two...
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Pale green and white speckled eggs with feathers glued to their surfaces. |
These factory-made speckled eggs were refreshed with just a small swipe or two of Mod Podge and speckled brown feathers. They took only moments to reinvent! Try doing the same in a variety of colored feathers and eggs.
Once I paint the basket shown below, I will include an updated version of it for visitors to see at a later date. For now it is white and will trim an egg tree along with other soft green and white eggs and things...
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See another version of the faux ivy basket painted with the colors of Lent and then filled with green moss and a speckled quail's egg inside of it. |
Craft Cardboard "Resurrection" Eggs . . .
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Cardboard 'Resurrection' eggs displayed on thorny shrubs. |
These cardboard eggs are both simpler and more economical for young children to assemble than the version I have described at my Easter blog. I have also included a variety of butterflies and a moth below that young students may print out on their home computers.
To make cardboard eggs like these you will need the following supplies: cardboard, an egg pattern, decorative scrap papers, white school glue, small twigs collected from outdoors, green acrylic paints, a few cotton balls, string for hanging, a chenille stem and butterfly/moth clip art.
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Left, shaping pupa with cotton on a chenille stem. Right, the chrysalis/pupa still need green paint. |
- Cut out the egg shape from scrap cardboard.
- Cover both the front and back of this egg with scrapbook papers. Some children may wish to choose to cover their backgrounds with a sky blue paper or a photo of the sky with clouds from a magazine. Other children may choose to interpret their "resurrection'' eggs with more artistic license and select any kind of decorative paper for this vignette. Either choice is fine as long as parents or teachers teach the symbolic meaning associated with the transformation story. I've included links to these below.
- Cut out a butterfly or moth to paste onto the egg. Alternatively, teachers could purchase butterfly stickers for the craft in advance to stick onto the egg.
- Now puddle the glue and adhere a small twig to the egg. Let dry.
- Cut a one inch segment of the chenille stem. Bend one end piece of this stem slightly.
- Unravel the cotton ball, only one of these per student will be necessary if that much.
- Squeeze a tiny bit of glue along the bristly edge of the cut stem and wrap the stem with the cotton batting. Repeat this step until the stem is shaped to look like a chrysalis, the pupa of a butterfly or moth. If you feel this method is a bit too fussy for very young children: you could shape this pupa from air dry clay or find a photo of the butterfly chrysalis to print and paste onto the egg.
- Puddle the glue a bit to get the pupa/chrysalis to stick to the cardboard surface.
- Brush on Mod Podge coating last to preserve the egg surface, twig and chrysalis.
- Punch a hole into the egg, to string a twine or ribbon through it so that little ones may hang the egg in a display or on an egg tree.
See the cotton batting chrysalis up close. More versions of Resurrection eggs with the butterfly symbol.
- The story behind the butterfly often told in Christian churches, families and communities... and the second half of the story here.
Butterflies and Moth Clip Art: resize these as needed...
Saturday, March 29, 2025
Decoupage Wild Birds On Eggs
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"God created the great sea monsters and every living creature that moves, with which the waters swarmed after their kind, and every winged bird after its kind;..." Genesis 1:21 |
"The common name for a bird in the Hebrew Scriptures, is tzephur, the rapid mover, or harrier; a name very expressive of these volatile creatures. A more general and indefinite name is ouph, a flier; but this appellation denotes every thing that flies whether bird or insect. It is frequently translated "fowl" in the English Bible. A bird of prey is called oith, a rusher, from the impetuosity with which is rushes upon its prey. In several of the passages where it occurs, our translators have rendered its plural form by "fowls."
'Nesting Chicken' Easter Egg
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Little hen nesting in an Easter egg. |
Turn a half egg into a grass-lined nest for a hen. This makes a clever little ornament to hang on an egg tree at Easter or if you prefer, on a Christmas tree.
- See more animals made for a Vintage Easter Display...
- DIY Broody Hens with pom-poms here. - alternative chicken body types instead of the cotton batting one shown on this post.
- and The simplest pom-pom hens for your youngest students here - at our doll blog
Supplies Needed:
- A plastic egg, just lower half
- 3 cotton balls
- white school glue
- masking tape
- one chenille stem
- a few goose down feathers or white feathers
- watercolors
- dried grass to line the 'egg' nest
- decorative paper and trim for the egg
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Open the plastic egg and keep only the lower half for this particular craft.
- Cover the entire part of the egg with masking tape, neatly smoothing out wrinkles with your thumbnail as you go.
- Decoupage decorative paper on the outside of the egg. Let dry.
- Attach a handle to the inside of the egg using masking tape.
- Puddle the glue on the inside and line the egg with craft grass of some kind.
- To shape the hen, cut from a wire two inches and bend the tip into a 'hook' shape as seen in the photo below.
- Wrap the wire with a fine layer of glue and twist the cotton batting onto it in layers to shape a hen's beak, head, neck and body.
- It is not necessary to add or shape the legs of the hen as she is in the seated position, tucked into the dried grassy nest. Puddle the glue generously and tuck her down into the nest.
- Let her dry in place before adding down feather where her wings and tail should be.
- Shape the comb and paint this with red watercolor. Glue it on.
- Paint the beak yellow and then the eyes.
- Shape a fancy hook from the left over wire.
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How to shape the head and neck of the hen from wire and cotton. |
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Steps for assembling the egg basket and pasting in the parts. |
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A soft, small hen nestled inside the lower half of a decoupaged Easter egg makes nice addition to egg tree. |
or the egg," sung by Mike Stewart
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
How to make maritime scrap collage eggs . . .
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Decoupage flat eggs with Maritime themes for the Easter egg tree. |
Cardboard egg cut-outs with sea or ocean themed subjects. I used the following items to embellish these scrapbook egg ornaments: blue ribbon, tiny real shells, nautical stamps, reprints of Victorian die cuts and Mod Podge. Below are a few of my own printables that students may use to craft their own versions, if the like.
- Victorian print of children playing on the beach here. - This print would also look nice on an egg too.
- Visit the out Beacon Chapel, a safe internet 'harbor' and space to weather the storms of life...
- Read about the significance of light houses as Christian symbolism
- The symbolic connections between the escallop sea shell and Christianity
- Why Christians use anchor symbolism
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Cut out cardboard shaped eggs.
- Glue on decorative papers to both sides.
- String blue ribbon through a hole inside a real shell (puka shell) and then through the top of each egg.
- Apply a generous amount of white glue to the shell hanger to prevent it from working loose from the hole.
- Brush on Mod Podge to add stamps, die cuts and any other interesting pictures or text to the maritime egg creations.
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Antique shell paper |
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Etching of ships |
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Sailor boy die cut |
The 'Unbreakable' Easter Eggs
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Two plastic egg versions decoupaged with yellow and green tissues and trimmed with ribbons. |
The 'unbreakable' egg in this instance will not be totally lost if it falls from the branches of an egg tree; it will, however, break if you run over it with a truck. So, I guess it is still breakable but just not in all instances like the common egg! And as always, the abilities of the crafter are more apparent within the aesthetics of the resulting egg. For some this process is heavenly, for others it will look like a 'hot mess.' Just keep practicing...
Supplies Needed:
- plastic eggs
- masking tape
- tissue papers
- decorative trims
- tacky craft glue
- Mod Podge
- ribbon, twine or wire for hanging
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- First insert the hanger for your eggs through the wholes provided at one of the ends of the egg. You can hide the knot if you like on the inside of the egg so that it will not be seen. Then pull the hanger up through the outside of the egg.
- Snap together the two halves of your plastic egg and use masking tape to keep the seam closed.
- Cover the entire surface of the plastic egg now with masking tape. Use the tip of your finger nails to smooth out wrinkles and creases made by the tape.
- Using small amounts of white school glue or Mod Podge, apply the tissue wherever you find it pleasing. Do cover the entire surface with the tissue. This process takes time because you must wait for areas of the egg to dry before moving on to other areas to cover.
- Once all of the egg is decoupaged, glue on the fancier trims if there are any.
- Mod Podge the entire finished tissue surfaces of the Easter egg left exposed.
- Hand your creation from anywhere on an egg tree. If it falls off the branches, this particular kind of egg will not break as will an actual egg.
Monday, March 24, 2025
Strawberry Easter Eggs
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Left, hard boiling white eggs. Center, gradually remove dye with aspirator. Right, polished with cooking oil and ready to eat. |
- Hard boil a set of white eggs prior to the dying process. Let them cool but do not remove the shells.
- Make the egg dye with red food coloring only. Boil in the kettle approximately one and a half cups of water. You will need only as much water as is necessary to cover one egg entirely after it is submerged in the dye bath.
- Pour approximately one cup of the boiling water into a heat proof mug or dish.
- Add one Tablespoon of white vinegar to the water in the mug.
- Add 5 to 6 drops of red food dye into the water and stir. It is important that you make this dye very bright red. Have a second empty mug next to the one filled with dye so that you can save the dye removed for another strawberry egg.
- Now submerge the white egg into the red dye with the narrow end pointing up.
- Using an eye-dropper or aspirator to suck up just enough of the dye to reveal the tip of the egg after only a few seconds. This will be the whitest or palest part of the strawberry egg once the dying process is finished. Discard the extra dye into a spare container and repeat the removal of dye in the same way every few minutes. The egg will eventually be turned right-side up once the dying is done.
- Let the eggs air dry on a dish towel.
- Draw the tiny black seeds on the eggs using a black permanent ink pen.
- To add the caps, Mod Podge small green leaves to the wider top end of the strawberries if you prefer. I don't usually add the caps. I nestle these strawberry eggs inside of green cupcake liners at each brunch plate.
- Rub on a very light coating of cooking oil, using a paper napkin, to give the eggs a slight shine.
- Refrigerate till the next morning, Easter Sunday.
- Decorate an Easter brunch table with these eggs, crack to open and peal shell off.
- Crumble the hard boiled egg, sprinkle with salt and pepper and eat promptly with hash browns and sausage!