Dying Easter Eggs
We recently enjoyed dying Easter eggs with our cousins. This is one of my kids favorite Easter activities, and one of mine as well!  The kids love dunking the eggs in bright dyes and getting creative with crayons and rubber bands.  This year we tried making Melted Crayon Easter Eggs, and they turned out great!
One of the cousins got creative with rubber bands and made this little egg holder. Â Kaleb loved it and used it to dip all his eggs. Â The tail was prefect for keeping his fingers out of the dye.
We had boiled and cooled the eggs earlier (for regular egg dying). Â Ideally, you would sprinkle the crayon shavings on freshly boiled eggs. Â However, it we ended up rewarming our cooked eggs in boiling water with no problems.
Sprinkle the crayon shavings onto the hot eggs. Â The egg will melt the crayons and create a beautiful pattern. Â Make sure you cover work surface or use a paper plate like we did. Â It can get a little messy.
Please use caution when working with hot eggs and melting wax!
I love how the melted crayon eggs turned out.  We also added some glitter for extra sparkle while the crayon was still warm.  You can never have enough sparkle at Easter:)
The melted crayons came out super great!
angie 🙂
How did you get the crayons to melt on the eggs I tried everything and all the colors melted together in a brown color! Help please
Those melted crayon ones are pure genius!
Pingback: Recycled Crafts & Activities from the PLAY Group | Housing a ForestHousing a Forest
Pingback: 100 Egg-cellent Easter Ideas: Recipes, Decor, Crafts + MORE
The melted crayon, glittery eggs are beautiful. I think my kids would like that activity. We will have to try it this year. I pinned this and it would be great if you linked up with Hobbies and Handicrafts.
http://highhillhomeschool.blogspot.com/search/label/Hobbies
Pingback: 10 Ways to Decorate Easter Eggs | Marianne McGoldrick's Blog
Can you share exactly how you created the ‘lined’ effect on the one egg? That one is my favorite! Thanks!
Terri, I love that one too. We actually sprinkled it with shavings and then drew on it back and forth with a crayon. Hope that helps.
Pingback: 25 Frugal Ways to Decorate Easter Eggs
So you just roll a hot egg in crayon shavings?
What a clever idea! Thanks for sharing!
Pingback: 10 Ways to Decorate Easter Eggs
Pingback: Sharpie Tie Dye Easter Eggs ~Housing a forestHousing a Forest
Pingback: Kool-aid Easter EggsHousing a Forest
My husband’s little German grandmother did the melted crayon thing forever. She used empty egg shells and melted the crayons on top of hot water. She held the egg in the small hole that she used to get the actual contents out of the shell and then gently rolled the shell across the melted crayon. She then filled the egg with candy, nuts or coins. She glued a paper towel over the hole using egg-white glue. Her grandchildren and great-grandchildren had the best egg hunts ever!
My family and all my friends in the little town of Brundidge, AL did our eggs that way. As an Army wife, I never found anyone else who had heard of that method. I don’t know that we have any German ancestors, however.
Pingback: PÃ¥skemoro 2: Slik pynter du eggene « Susanne Kaluza
Pingback: 20 ways to Decorate Easter Eggs - Making the World Cuter
Pingback: Melted Crayon Cross ~ Housing A ForestHousing a Forest
Pingback: Easter and Spring Activities - Housing a ForestHousing a Forest
Pingback: Pisanki na 20 sposobow | blog DEQPER
I wonder how long we can decorate the house with hard-boiled eggs?
Any odor???