Apple Crafts for Kids

Here’s a fun and easy kids apple craft you can do at home or in the classroom! 🍎

🍏 Apple Stamping Craft

Materials Needed:

  • Apples (cut in half)
  • Washable paint (red, green, yellow)
  • Paper plates (for holding paint)
  • White construction paper or cardstock
  • Paintbrush (optional, for stems and leaves)
  • Green and brown markers or crayons

Directions:

  1. Prepare the Apples: Cut an apple in half (either across the middle to show the star-shaped seeds, or top-to-bottom for a classic apple shape).
  2. Dip in Paint: Pour paint onto paper plates. Dip the flat side of the apple into the paint.
  3. Stamp: Press the painted side onto the paper to make apple prints.
  4. Add Details: Once dry, draw stems, leaves, and seeds with markers or crayons. Kids can even glue on real leaves for texture!

🍎 Paper Plate Apple Craft

Materials Needed:

  • Paper plates
  • Red, green, or yellow paint
  • Brown and green construction paper
  • Scissors & glue
  • String (optional to hang up)

Directions:

  1. Paint the paper plate red, green, or yellow.
  2. Cut out a brown rectangle (stem) and a green leaf from construction paper.
  3. Glue them to the top of the plate.
  4. For extra fun, cut a “bite” out of the apple plate!

🍏 Apple Tree Collage

Let kids use torn red tissue paper balls to glue onto a green tree cutout. They can make their very own apple orchard scene!

Easy Moon Craft For Kids

Here’s a simple, hands-on kids craft for teaching moon cycles — easy to make with household items and fun for little ones to play with after. We have been on a big moon kick at our house! Hope you enjoy this as much as we have.


Moon Phases Paper Plate Craft

Ages: 4+ (with help for cutting)
Time: About 20 minutes
Mess Level: Low


Materials

  • 2 white paper plates
  • Black construction paper (or you can color with a black crayon/marker)
  • Scissors
  • Glue stick or tape
  • Yellow crayon or paint (optional)
  • Marker (for labeling phases)
  • Brass fastener (paper brad)

Instructions

  1. Prepare the Moon Plate
    • On the first paper plate, draw and color a full moon in the center (you can make it yellow, or keep it white).
    • This plate will be your “moon view.”
  2. Make the Viewing Plate
    • Take the second paper plate and cut out a wide window (about 1/3 of the plate) — this will reveal the moon phases underneath.
    • Color the rest of this plate black to represent the night sky.
  3. Layer & Attach
    • Place the “moon plate” underneath the “viewing plate.”
    • Attach them in the center with a brass fastener so the top plate can spin.
  4. Add the Moon Phases
    • On the moon plate, lightly pencil in where each phase will show through the window as you rotate.
    • Color in the phases:
      • New Moon (all black)
      • Waxing Crescent (thin white slice on the right)
      • First Quarter (right half white)
      • Waxing Gibbous (mostly white, left sliver black)
      • Full Moon (all white)
      • Waning Gibbous (mostly white, right sliver black)
      • Last Quarter (left half white)
      • Waning Crescent (thin white slice on the left)
  5. Label the Phases
    • Around the edge of the top plate, write the names of each moon phase so kids can match them as they turn the plate.

Extra Fun Ideas

  • Add glow-in-the-dark paint for nighttime learning.
  • Use glitter for the stars around the moon.
  • Make a mini booklet with facts about each phase to go with the craft.


Here’s a delightful list of children’s books about the Moon—perfect for story time, bedtime, or teaching lunar concepts in a fun and gentle way:


Recommended Children’s Books about the Moon

Fiction & Bedtime Favorites

  • “Kitten’s First Full Moon” by Kevin Henkes
    A sweet Caldecott Medal–winning tale of a kitten mistaking the full moon for a bowl of milk. 
  • “A Big Mooncake for Little Star” by Grace Lin
    A charming Caldecott Honor book where a girl named Little Star nibble at a “mooncake”—an imaginative reflection of moon phases. 
  • “Papa, Please Get the Moon for Me” by Eric Carle
    A playful story about a dad retrieving the moon for his child—teaching about waxing and waning through collage illustrations.
  • “I Took the Moon for a Walk” by Carolyn Curtis, illustrated by Alison Jay
    A lyrical, rhyming tale about a walk with the moon, perfect for soothing bedtime reading. 
  • “Mooncake” by Frank Asch
    A bedtime tale featuring Bear who mistakes snow for the moon—sweet and whimsical. 
  • “The Moon Child” by Nadia Krilanovich
    A dreamy, gentle story of woodland animals playing with the moon, ideal for winding down. 
  • “Owl Moon” by Jane Yolen
    A serene, Caldecott-winning tale of a nighttime owl outing with powerful lunar imagery. 
  • “Many Moons” by Remi Courgeon
    A beautifully illustrated blend of fiction and moon-phase education, with imaginative descriptions like a cat’s tail crescent. 
  • “Rabbit and the Moon” by Douglas Wood
    A folktale adaptation of a Cree legend, explaining how rabbit reached the moon. Soothing watercolor illustrations. 

Playful & Educational Nonfiction

  • “Moon! Earth’s Best Friend” by Stacy McAnulty
    Narrated by the Moon itself—this fun and fact-filled portrayal is great for young children. 
  • “The Moon Seems to Change” by Franklyn M. Branley
    A more instructional take on lunar phases—great for slightly older kids ready for straightforward learning.
  • “Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11” by Brian Floca
    Gorgeous illustrations depict the awe and excitement of the first Moon landing—great for curious explorers.
  • “Moon: A Peek-Through Board Book” by Britta Teckentrup
    A tactile board book with cut-outs showing lunar phases—perfect for hands-on interaction. 
  • “A Moon of My Own” by Jennifer Rustgi
    Follows a girl’s journey travelling the world with the moon—mixes geography and starry storytelling. 
  • “Moon Pops” by Heena Baek
    A culturally-inspired Korean tale where the moon melts—inspiring and visually delightful.
  • “The Moon Tonight: Our Moon’s Journey Around Earth” by Jung Chang-hoon
    A gentle nonfiction story celebrating the lunar cycle, with parent-child scenes and supplemental educator resources.
  • “Go for the Moon: A Rocket, a Boy, and the First Moon Landing” by Chris Gall
    A fun adventure capturing Apollo 11 through a child’s imaginative lens. 

DIY Cloud Dough Recipe – 3 Ingredient Homemade Play Doh

This is a super easy, homemade play doh recipe! Known as cloud dough, this DIY play dough only has 3 ingredients. A 2:1 ratio of cornstarch and lotion will give you an awesome (and good smelling) homemade cloud dough. This is a fun one to have the kids involved in the making process as well. This is great as a kids craft idea, boredom buster, inside, or outside play doh. #kidscrafts #clouddough #diykids #kidscrafts #crafts #art

Recipe:

  • 1 cup of cornstarch
  • 1/2 cup of lotion
  • Desired food coloring

You can make as much or as little homemade play doh as you like as long as you have a 1:2 ratio of cornstarch and lotion. I’ve seen other recipes for cloud dough use conditioner but I like lotion the best!

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