Materials: Lollipop, tissue, string, Sharpie. These are perfect for class parties or passing out to trick or treaters on Halloween night. Use string to secure them and let the kids go wild drawing on their best scary “boo” faces. Kids can take their favorite lollipops and drape a few tissues overtop. Ghost lollipops Image via wooshkahcrafts/InstagramĬrafting doesn’t get simpler than these ghostly lollipops from WooshkahCrafts. Materials: Toilet roll, hole punch, kid-safe paint, black construction paper or cardstock, googly eyes, chalk, pipe cleaners, glue or tape. These are so easy to make and they’ll put all those empty toilet rolls you’re tossing to good use. Parents can help kids paint the toilet paper roll and cut out the wings and ears, and then kids can handle glueing on the eyes, wings and ears, drawing on a mouth and attaching the pipe cleaner “legs” through a couple of punched holes at the bottom of the roll. The kids will love hanging these little black bats, created by Bianca at Uncreative Mum, all around the house for Halloween. Toilet roll bat Image via uncreativemum/Instagram Materials:Paper plates, orange, black, green and brown construction paper, glue stick, clothespins or popsicle sticks for little hands to hold them. Can you say easy masks and instant Halloween decorations? If you’re working with wee ones, adults can cut out the shapes for the leaves, stems and jack-o’-lantern faces, but kids can help tear orange construction paper into large pieces to create the collage pumpkin. This pumpkin plate collage craft from tutor and teacher Yee Kuan is fun for even the youngest little artists. Jack o’ lantern paper plate art Image via mulgrave_child_care/Instagram Materials: Pine cone, black paint, black pipe cleaners, googly eyes, white felt or cardstock. Display the critter in some cottony spider webs to give it the full effect. Help your child turn their autumn finds into this spooky spider from Amanda at Manda Panda Projects. Pine cone spooktakular spider Image via mandapandaprojects/Instagram Spiders: Of course, adding spiders (plastic toy ones or simple paper cutouts) to any of these webs is the perfect finishing touch.Ĩ.Yarn-wrapped webs: Recycled cardboard (some painted), scissors and yarn.Popsicle stick webs: Colored popsicle sticks, yarn and hot glue.Paper plate webs: Paper plates, oil pastels (or crayons) and watered-down tempera paint.She combined reading books about spiders with the crafting for a great, hands-on learning activity. Librarian and mom Sarah-Lyn of EcoCraftKids shares not one and not two but three easy spiderwebs crafts for kids to make. Spiderwebs Image via ecocraftkids/Instagram Materials: Popsicle sticks, black paper, hot glue gun, stickers or anything else (they used Wonder Stix) you’d like to decorate with. Kids can build and decorate their own spooky mansions. These paper and popsicle stick haunted houses from Luisa at tinyn3rds are too cute.
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