Free Range Easter Egg Decorators
Easter comes early this year.
What are your favorite Easter Traditions?
When I was growing up I always looked forward to getting a new Easter Dress and Easter Bonnet. Sometimes the Easter Dress was a hand-me-down from an older relative but it was new to me. Another tradition was an entire day of getting Easter Eggs ready. I loved watching those little tablets of dye dissolve in the water and then taking the hardboiled eggs and dipping them into those glasses full of dye with that little wire holder.
Today, with my kids, I still love carrying on the tradition of creating brightly covered Easter eggs. The only difference is that we look for natural solutions to the Easter Egg Dye.
Kool-Aid has come up with a cool solution.
CLICK HERE to visit the Kraft page the Kool-Aid solution and for more ideas on Easter Eggs.
I always love letting the kids experiment with glue and sparkles and stickers and feathers (camouflage easter eggs) and letting them decorate the eggs anyway they want to. It is good for me to take a deep breath and remind myself that this project is about the kids and not about my preconceived notion of how these eggs are supposed to look. I suppose you could call it Free Range Easter Egg Decorating.
The only thing about this project is that it is sort of time intensive. It takes time to boil the eggs and let them cool. Then the actual process of decorating can take a while and is typically messy. The best way to enjoy this process is to budget in the time for this one. Give yourself plenty of time to take it slow and enjoy the discoveries that your kids come up with when they are let loose with a grape purple dye.
What are your favorite Easter Traditions?
When I was growing up I always looked forward to getting a new Easter Dress and Easter Bonnet. Sometimes the Easter Dress was a hand-me-down from an older relative but it was new to me. Another tradition was an entire day of getting Easter Eggs ready. I loved watching those little tablets of dye dissolve in the water and then taking the hardboiled eggs and dipping them into those glasses full of dye with that little wire holder.
Today, with my kids, I still love carrying on the tradition of creating brightly covered Easter eggs. The only difference is that we look for natural solutions to the Easter Egg Dye.
Kool-Aid has come up with a cool solution.
CLICK HERE to visit the Kraft page the Kool-Aid solution and for more ideas on Easter Eggs.
I always love letting the kids experiment with glue and sparkles and stickers and feathers (camouflage easter eggs) and letting them decorate the eggs anyway they want to. It is good for me to take a deep breath and remind myself that this project is about the kids and not about my preconceived notion of how these eggs are supposed to look. I suppose you could call it Free Range Easter Egg Decorating.
The only thing about this project is that it is sort of time intensive. It takes time to boil the eggs and let them cool. Then the actual process of decorating can take a while and is typically messy. The best way to enjoy this process is to budget in the time for this one. Give yourself plenty of time to take it slow and enjoy the discoveries that your kids come up with when they are let loose with a grape purple dye.
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