Children can make these Easter basket hats

  • By Jennifer Forker Associated Press
  • Friday, March 7, 2008 2:39pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

This isn’t the Easter bonnet your grandmother wore. And you won’t find it at church on Easter Sunday (let’s hope).

However, this Easter basket hat is a blast to make, and even more fun to wear. What’s more, it can help burn off some of your children’s Easter morning anticipation.

If you’re a crafting junkie with a monster stash of supplies, then these are easy enough. Otherwise, it’s a quick dash to the crafting store for a few inexpensive parts.

The rewards are many: For parents, it’s an hour or so when children are focused, busy and working creatively. For kids, it’s the chance to create without parental interference, with any luck.

This is the tricky part. Parents like to get involved, and we particularly like to make things “perfect” — whatever that means. Avoid this naughty behavior and allow your child the freedom to create with abandon. One way to accomplish this is to make your own hat, which is what this adult did while working with six kids.

This is an easy craft for 7-year-olds on up. It’s a little more difficult for the younger set, because it involves wielding the stapler, but with an adult’s help, they’ll enjoy using that alluring device.

Also, if you want to avoid a big mess, skip the glue and make it a stapler-only project.

The neighborhood children who helped me with this project came up with some clever ways to personalize their hats. Even better were their smiles.

Supplies

You’ll need:

One sheet of 12-inch-by-18-inch foam for each hat

A stapler and plenty of staples

A ruler

Glue that actually works, such as Elmer’s or Aleene’s Tacky Glue

Colored markers

Plastic or paper Easter grass (paper staples more easily)

Foam cutout Easter shapes, if you have them, or construction paper to create your own

Pipe-cleaners in kid-friendly colors

Anything else in your grab bag of crafting supplies, such as pompoms, stickers, small beads, buttons, fabric, or Easter-themed paper

Cut and measure

1. Using the ruler and a pencil or pen, mark off your foam sheet into three sections: Two sections need to be 5 inches wide by 18 inches long, leaving the third piece, which will be 2 inches wide by 18 inches long.

2. Cut your foam sheet into these three sections.

3. Staple the two 5-inch-wide sheets of foam together to create one sheet that’s almost 36 inches long (the overlap will make it shorter).

4. Put the smaller foam piece aside. This will be your basket handle.

5. Wrap the length of foam around the child’s head to get an approximate diameter for the basket. Leaving two or three inches to account for stapling, cut the foam.

Decorate

6. Lay the “basket” length of foam in front of the child and show where the center of the hat will be when it’s on his or her head and explain that this is the section to focus on.

7. Allow the child to decorate the hat as he or she sees fit. This may include markers, stickers, foam shapes, beads, pompoms or other supplies. Some things are best stapled, others glued.

8. After the band is decorated, ooh and ahh over the child’s superior artistic skills.

9. Help the child staple green “grass” and other decorations, such as pipe cleaners, to the hat.

Assemble and admire

10. Roll the decorated foam band around the artist-child’s head and hold. Remove band and staple to the proper size. Cut off any unwanted foam.

11. Cut the 2-inch-wide foam to a length that suits the basket, about 14 inches.

12. Finally, take pictures of the child beaming from beneath that crazy Easter basket hat!

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

2025 Toyota Land Cruiser (Provided by Toyota).
2025 Toyota Land Cruiser revives its roots

After a 3-year hiatus, the go-anywhere SUV returns with a more adventurous vibe.

Enjoy the wilderness in the CX-50. Photo provided by Mazda USA Newsroom
2025 Mazda CX-50 Adds Hybrid Capability to Turbo Options

Line-Up Receives More Robust List Of Standard Equipment

Practical And Functional bZ4X basks in sunshine. Photo provided by Toyota Newsroom.
2024 bZ4X Puts Toyota Twist On All-Electric SUV’s

Modern Styling, Tech & All-Wheel Drive Highlight

Photo provided by Mazda USA Newsroom
2025 Mazda3 Turbo Premium Plus Hatch Delivers Value

Plus Functionality of AWD And G-Vectoring

2025 Mazda CX-90 Turbo SUV (Provided by Mazda)
2025 CX-90 Turbo models get Mazda’s most powerful engine

Mazda’s largest-ever SUV is equipped to handle the weight, with fuel efficiency kept in check.

Provided by Bridges Pets, Gifts, & Water Gardens.
Discover where to find the best pet supplies in town

Need the perfect store to spoil your furry friends? Herald readers have you covered.

VW Jetta SEL is a sedan that passes for a coupe. Photo provided by Volkswagen U.S. Media.
2025 VW Jetta Offers Greater Refinement, Technology And Value

A Perfect Choice For Small Families And Commuters

2025 Land Rover Range Rover Velar (Photo provided by Land Rover).
2025 Range Rover Velar SUV tends toward luxury

Elegant styling and a smaller size distinguish this member of the Land Rover lineup.

Honda Ridgeline TrailSport photo provided by Honda Newsroom
2025 Honda Ridgeline AWDt: A Gentlemen’s Pickup

TrailSport Delivers City Driving Luxury With Off-Road Chops

Photo provided by Subaru.
Subaru Forester is all-new for 2025, a sixth generation

The enduring compact SUV is sleeker but doesn’t ditch its original rugged looks.

Sport Touring Hybrid photo provided by Honda Newsroom
2025 Honda Civic Builds On The Model’s 52-Year History

More Style, Tech And Two-Motor Hybrid Powertrain Added

The top-level Elite trim of the 2024 Honda Prologue (Provided by Honda).
2024 Prologue is Honda’s first all-electric SUV

This midsizer has roomy seating for five and a maximum 296-mile range.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.