Activities May 19, 2026

20 Beautiful Summer Crafts for Toddlers That Are Easy, Fun, and Totally Mess-Worthy

By Sloane Miller 10 Min Read
Summer Crafts for Toddlers

There is something about summer that makes crafting feel completely different. You can take it outside and let it get as messy as it needs to.

You do not have to worry about paint on the carpet because the whole thing is happening on the patio. For more warm weather inspiration, see our favorite summer activities for toddlers.

Toddler crafts do not need to produce anything particularly beautiful to be worth doing. The act of mixing colors, pressing hands into paint, cutting paper, and sticking things down is what develops fine motor skills.

For a quieter indoor sewing project, browse our diy felt quiet book ideas.

Here are 20 of the best summer crafts for toddlers, organized by theme. All of them are genuinely doable with a child under four, and all of them are perfect for the season.


Sun and Sky Crafts

The summer sky gives you so much to work with. These crafts are inspired by everything happening above your toddler’s head on a beautiful summer day.

1. Paper Plate Sun

Real-world inspiration courtesy of @crafty.little.ones

Paint a paper plate bright yellow or orange and cut strips of yellow cardstock or foam for the rays. Let your toddler glue the rays around the edge of the plate while the paint is still slightly tacky.

Add a smiling face with a black marker once it dries. It is simple, colorful, and completely satisfying for a two-year-old.

2. Cotton Ball Cloud Collage

A toddler's blue cardstock collage decorated with fluffy white cotton ball clouds
Design Tip: Pair cotton cloud layouts with pastel backing paper from Target.

Paint the top half of a piece of blue cardstock with a lighter shade of blue for the sky. Let your toddler glue stretched-out cotton balls onto the upper half to make fluffy clouds.

Use handprints or fingerprints in yellow to make a sun in the corner. This one looks genuinely lovely framed.

3. Rainbow Tissue Paper Art

A colorful rainbow craft made from crumpled tissue paper squares glued on cardstock
Shopping Tip: Find rainbow tissue paper packs and child-safe glue at IKEA.

Cut tissue paper into small squares in every color of the rainbow. Draw a large arc on white cardstock and let your toddler crumple and glue the tissue paper squares along each stripe of the arc.

When crafting with small items, safety is always our priority. The American Academy of Pediatrics reminds parents that small craft parts like googly eyes, buttons, or crumpled tissue paper can be choking hazards for kids under three, requiring vigilant supervision.

You can find more detail on the AAP toddler play safety guidelines to keep your afternoon of making worry-free.

4. Watercolour Sunset Painting

A vibrant watercolor sunset painting with pink, orange, and yellow bleeding colors
Design Tip: Frame sunset watercolor paintings in light birch wood frames from IKEA.

Wet a piece of watercolor paper all over with a damp brush. While it is still wet, let your toddler paint stripes of orange, pink, red, and yellow across the page.

The colors will bleed into each other and create a gorgeous sunset effect without any technical skill required. This is one of those crafts that always looks stunning.


Ocean and Beach Crafts

Whether you live near the coast or nowhere near it, ocean-themed crafts are a summer staple. They involve sensory materials and subjects that toddlers love.

5. Handprint Crab

Real-world inspiration courtesy of @littlehands.kids

Press both of your toddler’s hands in red or orange paint with the fingers spread wide, then overlap the two handprints in the center so the thumbs face each other.

Each finger becomes a crab leg. Once dry, add two googly eyes and a little smile to complete the character.

6. Shell Printing

Overlapping paint shell prints on heavy art paper
Design Tip: Display shell printing paper on natural wood clipboards from Pottery Barn Kids.

Collect or buy a selection of shells with interesting ridged textures. Press them into a thin layer of paint and then onto paper to print their pattern.

Layer different shells in overlapping colors to create a beautiful abstract beach-inspired print. Let your toddler experiment with pressure and angles.

7. Paper Bag Jellyfish

A colorful paper-mache jellyfish sculpture with hanging ribbon tentacles
Shopping Tip: Order paper-mache supplies and colored craft ribbons on Amazon.

Blow up a small round balloon and paper-mache over it using torn strips of newspaper and a flour-water paste. Once fully dry and the balloon is popped out, paint it in soft pinks, purples, and blues.

Cut long ribbon strips and glue them hanging from the bottom for tentacles. Hang it from the ceiling in their room for a beautiful ocean display.

8. Sand and Glue Sensory Art

A child's drawing textured with sand and painted over with watercolors
Design Tip: Frame textured sand art in shadow boxes from Target.

Let your toddler draw a simple picture on cardstock using a thick layer of craft glue, then sprinkle clean sand over the glue and shake the excess off.

Once dry, they can paint over the sand texture with watercolors for a beautiful layered beach-inspired artwork. The tactile element makes this one especially engaging.


Garden and Nature Crafts

Summer is the season where nature gives you the most to work with. Leaves, flowers, seeds, and sticks are all free craft supplies waiting just outside your door.

9. Leaf Print Wrapping Paper

Real-world inspiration courtesy of @conscious_craft

Collect a selection of leaves with interesting shapes and vein patterns. Apply a thin layer of paint to the front of each leaf using a brush, then press it firmly onto kraft paper.

Peel back the leaf to reveal the print. Layer different leaves and colors until the whole sheet is covered, creating custom wrapping paper.

10. Pressed Flower Suncatcher

A circular suncatcher decorated with colorful pressed flower petals
Design Tip: Hang suncatchers in bright windows using clear adhesive hooks from Target.

Press a selection of small flowers and petals flat between two books for three or four days. Once dry, arrange them between two pieces of clear contact paper.

Cut into a circle, punch a hole at the top, and tie a string. Hang in a sunny window and watch the light come through the petals.

11. Painted Terracotta Pot

A small terracotta garden pot decorated with colorful toddler paint brushstrokes
Design Tip: Line up painted pots on outdoor benches from Pottery Barn Kids.

Buy a small terracotta pot from any garden center. Let your toddler paint it with acrylic craft paint in any pattern they want, dots, stripes, or full abstract coverage.

Seal it with a coat of outdoor varnish once dry. Plant a cheerful marigold or small succulent inside and display it on the doorstep.

12. Twig Frame

A rustic square photo frame made from bound twigs and dry flowers
Design Tip: Glue frames together using non-toxic wood adhesive from Target.

Collect four straight sticks of roughly equal length. Let your toddler help you bind the corners together with twine, or handle the glue application yourself.

Glue or tie on small flowers, leaves, and berries. Add a string of twine to the back for hanging a favorite summer photo.

If you want holiday-specific ideas, try our simple fathers day crafts for toddlers.


Frozen and Food-Inspired Crafts

These crafts combine the best parts of summer: cold things, edible ingredients, and the pure joy of watching things change.

13. Frozen Watercolour Ice Painting

A toddler painting on white paper using frozen blocks of watercolor paint on sticks
Shopping Tip: Order durable silicone ice cube trays and jumbo wooden lolly sticks on Amazon.

The day before, pour watercolor paint mixed with water into an ice cube tray. Push a wooden lolly stick into each cube before freezing.

In the morning, pop the cubes out and let your toddler paint on white paper. The ice melts as they paint, creating beautiful, blended color effects.

14. Fruit Stamp Art

A white paper decorated with orange, lemon, and apple paint stamps
Design Tip: Style citrus prints on cotton towels using fabric paint from Target.

Cut a lemon, orange, strawberry, and apple in half. Press each cut side into paint and stamp it onto white paper.

The natural textures of the fruit create incredibly beautiful prints. A cross-section of an orange looks like a stained-glass window when stamped in orange paint.

15. Melted Crayon Sun Art

Melted yellow and orange crayon wax blended on white cardstock under the sun
Shopping Tip: Use heavy cardstock and beeswax crayons from Crate & Kids.

On a very hot day, place a piece of white cardstock in direct sunlight. Let your toddler press crayons directly onto the hot paper and draw.

The heat from the sun partially melts the crayon wax as they draw, creating a blended effect. This only works in strong direct sunlight.

16. Cornstarch and Water Slime

Two child hands playing with white cornstarch and water oobleck slime in a plastic tub
Shopping Tip: Find food coloring sets and large plastic play tubs at IKEA.

Mix two parts cornstarch to one part water in a large bowl. Add food coloring if you like to create oobleck, a non-Newtonian fluid.

Set it up outside in a tray and let your toddler explore it with their hands. It is endslessly fascinating for toddlers of any age.


Keepsake Summer Crafts

These are the crafts you will actually keep. They take a little more time but they are worth every minute.

17. Summer Memory Handprint Canvas

A small stretched canvas featuring a colorful toddler handprint with the date written in the corner
Shopping Tip: Order multi-packs of mini canvases and acrylic paint on Amazon.

Buy a small stretched canvas. Let your toddler press their handprint in the center in a bright summer color.

Around the handprint, write the date, your toddler’s age, and a few words about their favorite things. In five years it will be one of your most treasured possessions.

18. Photo Transfer Plate

A white ceramic plate displaying a black and white transferred family photo
Design Tip: Decorate display shelves using white display stands from Target.

Print a favorite summer photo onto regular printer paper. Coat a plain white ceramic plate with a thick layer of photo transfer medium, press the photo face down, and smooth out air bubbles.

Let it dry overnight, then wet the paper and rub it away gently to reveal the image transferred onto the plate. Seal and display.

19. Summer Journal Decorated Cover

A notebook cover decorated with colorful toddler stamp prints and seashells
Shopping Tip: Find blank kraft journals and decoupage glue at Target.

Buy a plain notebook or journal. Let your toddler paint, stamp, and collage the cover using summer-themed materials, shell prints, and flower stamps.

Once dry, seal with mod podge. Use the journal to stick in mementos from the summer: ticket stubs, pressed flowers, and drawings.

20. Tie-Dye Pillowcase Keepsake

A white cotton pillowcase freshly colored with bright tie-dye patterns
Shopping Tip: Order non-toxic tie-dye kits and white cotton pillowcases on Amazon.

Buy a plain white cotton pillowcase. Do a tie-dye in your toddler’s favorite colors.

Once it is rinsed, dried, and unfolded, use a fabric pen to write the year and their name. Wash it at the end of the season, fold it, and put it away.


Sloane’s Take

Sloane’s Take

“Keep a dedicated summer craft box on a low shelf your toddler can reach. Stock it with paper, paint, glue, googly eyes, cotton balls, and a few seasonal items like shells or pressed flowers. When they ask what to do, point them at the box before you suggest anything structured. You will be surprised how often they come up with something creative entirely on their own, and all you have to do is sit nearby and let it happen.”


Final Thoughts

Summer crafting with toddlers is less about the output and more about the ritual of sitting down together, getting a little messy, and making something from nothing. It is one of the best things you can do for their development.

Pick a few favorites from this list, gather your supplies at the start of the week, and keep everything accessible. The easier it is to set up, the more often you will actually do it.

Visual Inspiration: Some imagery in this article was created using AI rendering tools to serve as design concepts. Real-world styling alternatives are recommended below each idea.

Sloane Miller - Editor-in-Chief
Written By

Sloane Miller

Sloane Miller is a former Pediatric Behavioral Specialist turned slow-living advocate. She founded Mom Daily Ideas as a noise-free, curated digital sanctuary dedicated to elegant, science-backed solutions for raising little ones without losing yourself.

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