![]() Chill in the freezer until set, then serve as treats for snack time. Pour the mixture into small paper cups and insert plastic spoons for handles. Mix together 2 cups plain yogurt,12 ounce can unsweetened frozen apple-cranberry juice concentrate and 2 teaspoons vanilla. The class can plant pink and purple flowers, pat pink paint on pig or pansies shapes play with pink play dough (pat, push, pull), paste pink (tissue) paper as blossoms on a tree make pretty pink necklaces from pink dyed macaroni and blow and pop bubbles from pink tinted bubble solution. It is great to play this outdoors in springtime if you live near flowering trees that are in bloom.Ĭombine pink with other P words such as: pig, petunias, pansies, paint, paper, paste, pop etc. Play “I spy with my little eye, something that is pink” all around the house. You can look to see who used the most spoonfuls of red, pink, or who used the least spoonfuls, who mixed the darkest shade, the lightest shade, etc. You end up with a colorful mixing chart for your math and science area. Record how many spoonfuls of each color he or she uses and then paint a little sample of the mixed color next to the numbers. Let each child mix spoonfuls of red and white paint in a cup. Use a very large pink poster board heart as the base for your pink collage. Invite children and parents to look for pink collage items at home to bring to school. The child can then slip a finger into the hole to manipulate the puppet. Help the kids use a sharpened pencil to poke a hole in the lower side of the puppet. The kids can add wiggle eyes or draw eyes with markers. When the paint dries, have the child create some pink construction paper ears and tape them to the cup. Glue all cotton on top of stick.īegin by having each child paint a plain white paper cup pink. Take paper towel tubes and cotton balls and make a stick of cotton candy. When the paint has dried the children can glue on a large wiggle eye and a pink curly pipe cleaner. Provide each child with a pig cut out shape and have the children paint using pink finger paint. Place colored cotton balls in cone (after paint has dried) glue the layers on to hold in place Color the cotton balls by placing in a Ziploc bag with a little bit of tempera paint and shake to coatĥ. Cut out circles and along the dotted lines, fold the cones into shape and tapeĤ. Draw dotted lines on the circle start on outside of circle and draw down to center. Trace the coffee can to make a circle shape for each childĢ. This would be both hard and dangerous for the littles. With older children you could let them inflate and deflate the balloon like a real wad of gum. Insert a slightly inflated pink balloon in the mouth for a pink bubble of bubble gum. Have children make a paper plate face of themselves. Make a simple flamingo by making a number 2 as a body and then adding legs. Glue them to a piece of construction paper or oak tag that has a bare tree drawn on. Shake popped popcorn in a paper bag with a little pink powder paint. If you are creative, draw images that they can color, such as a sink (making a pink sink) or a drink and expect someone to rhyme “stink” but that is OK since they have grasped the concept of rhyming! Have the children look through magazines and old catalogs for pink things, cut out and make a pink book. They can cut the flowers or whatever pink shapes there are and glue on a sheet of paper (could be pink but it looks really great on black!). For this theme, have the children search for scraps that contain the color pink. You can control the color by just giving a dab of red and lots of white in the 2 cups.Ĭollect scraps of wrapping paper all year. Seeing where pink comes from is really fun and so important for cognitive development. Then have them paint with the colors they have come up with. ![]() ![]() Have them add whatever quantities of each color they want, stirring and mixing to their hearts delight. Give children red and white paint in cups, along with a spoon or two, paint brushes and a third container. Our activities are used by teachers, moms, dads, child care providers and more!Īll our activities are available at no cost and are free to print and share. You have come to the right place if you are looking for fun, engaging and exciting Pink color activities to do with toddlers, preschoolers and kindergartners. ![]()
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