Last week I got inspired by the lovely hand-painted Easter eggs by Laikonik that I saw on the Famile Summerbelle website. I had visions of sitting around the kitchen table with my kids producing one egg gem after another and hanging them all over the flat… But turns out fantasy and reality could not have been any different — our egg painting experience was a complete bust!
Right from the start I came across some barriers: most eggs in France are not white but brown, so it is really hard to paint them and get a nice colour. It is also impossible to find those little tablets you dye eggs with over here! But I was not going to be deterred but such minor details, so I started looking up natural ways of dying eggs. I came across loads of different suggestions, including: onion peel, rose petals and spinach which, according to the internet, all give eggs wonderful, delicate colours. I got very excited and raided my vegetable box.
I promise you that wrapping an egg in spinach leaves and rose petals and then sticking it in an old sock (again according to the internet) is no easy feat, and by the time I was finished my kids were long gone, pretending to be tigers on the other side of the flat.
Anyway, I boiled the eggs wrapped up in spinach, roses and onions and…. every single one of them came out looking like I had boiled them in the contents of a dirty nappy. They were definitely not the delicately dyed eggs I had imagined….
So here is the thing: If anyone has any tips on Easter egg colouring, or any good Easter crafts for that matter, please do share!
– Emilie
Comments (17)
Martha Stewart website just posted about egg decorating ideas today:
http://www.marthastewart.com/photogallery/easter-eggs?xsc=eml_crd_2010_03_30
Yes… but don’t you find Martha’s ideas to be impossibly difficult? Always cute, but never easy…
Last year I tried her idea of using little plants and flowers to leave beautiful prints on the eggs when you dye them… and it didn’t work at all!
Wish I was Martha!
I am so glad someone else shares my sentiments about Martha!! I can NEVER get anything to turn out like her pictured crafts. I’ve heard you can use food coloring & water & vinegar to dye eggs, but I think you might need a liberal hand with the food coloring drops…..
watercolor paints and markers! see the eggs i have posted on my website (www.kadiefoppiano.com) – of course, i use blown eggs so they last forever.
Wow! Amazing Kadie – how do you make sure they don’t crack when painting? I’ve had that a couple of times and it is so annoying – must be so awful if it happens when you have put so much work into them.
Wow – Kadie your decorated eggs are stunning!!
This is what I am currently working on. Oh so cute for some seasonal dramatic play. http://www.purlbee.com/bunny-finger-puppets/
Those bunny finger puppets are so darling. And they look simple enough to make… even for me!
So cute! Love them!
I always use those pills you can get at the supermarket. Not sure about the ‘green and natural sources’ but they do the trick wonderfully well. After you can rub a little oil on the eggs for a nice shine…
Totally agree on the Martha front, BTW. She’s just too impossibly perfect!
LOVE your eggs, Kadie – they’re beautiful and totally outdo Martha’s!! 😉
I use those dyes too – but totally impossible to find here – so I always stock up when in Germany – or go to my favourite German Baker (Hansel & Pretzel – I love a kitsch name!) in Ham to buy some. However I have found some egg-dye kits available to buy online – check out:
http://www.partybox.co.uk/easter-party-products/Egg-Dying-Kit-Dunk-and-Colour-Cups_10586.htm
Embrace the browness of the brown egg: decorate with brown and pink bunny ears (card board) some eyes and a nose (pen). Add a fluffy tail (cotton wool)
Hey presto!
This is my problem, those dyes are impossible to find in France too!
Here is an article from another blog I frequent about natural egg-dying. No mention of wrapping in socks! I haven’t tried it, as I have a 9-month old who doesn’t know what Easter is yet, much less have the ability to dye eggs, but see what you think – maybe it would work for you?
http://simpleorganic.net/how-to-color-eggs-with-natural-dyes/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+SimpleOrganic+%28Simple+Organic%29
Brown eggs don’t work for me but if you can get some white ones i roll them in some food colouring and a drop of water and they come out all pastel hued and spring like. Pretty.
I know a lot of folks who don’t eat eggs (they’re allergic, for health reasons, or concerns about animal cruelty). Here’s an awesome site that gives tips on cooking and baking without eggs: http://EggFreeLiving.com