I get these crazy ideas in my head and I just have to try them. This time I thought, what about painting plastic Easter eggs? I wasn’t entirely sure that it would work and that the paint would stick to the plastic, but I gave it a shot anyway. I was pleasantly surprised that it DID work and that the texture was very nice- much more like real eggs. So of course I made a whole bunch of them!!!
Here is the step-by-step tutorial of how I did it:
I used regular old acrylic craft paint in some pastel colors and an assortment of old plastic Easter eggs that were in the Easter box. Separate the eggs so that they can sit on the newspaper to dry and you can hold them from underneath to work with them. Apply the paint with a foam sponge brush and wipe it on pretty heavily, but evenly. After the first coat, you can still see a lot of the plastic.

Let it dry COMPLETELY and then apply a second heavy coat, brushing in the same direction as before so you don’t pull the first coat of paint off. The coverage gets a lot better.

After that coat dries, dab and sponge the paint on heavily for the third coat. This gives it the nice eggshell texture later. 

If you can still see a little plastic when this dries, you may need a fourth coat to touch it up. 

Then, SPECKLE! Take a toothbrush and dip it in chocolate brown paint. Go pretty heavy for some big splotches, and flick the brush with your finger about 12 inches above the eggs. I practiced on the newspaper first (like Mommy said to) until I got the hang of it. This part is messy, but fun!
My son saw me speckling and said “Whose toothbrush is that?” I think they turned out pretty cute! The speckles remind me of candy eggs. Yummm…
My son saw me speckling and said “Whose toothbrush is that?” I think they turned out pretty cute! The speckles remind me of candy eggs. Yummm…




15 comments:
Cute! Many years ago when Leggs panty hose came in those giant plastic eggs, I saved them all year and then painted them gold. Those were used for the Easter hunt every year and whoever found those got special prizes!
Have a wonderful day!
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http://christiecottage.blogspot.com
They look great Lindsay! I'm not ambitious enough to try it, but I like yours. =)
love the look how super cute
So cute!
I just started my own craft blog over at
gingersnapcrafts.blogspot.com
Would love to feature you as a guest blogger & share this fun project.
My e-mail is gczbowie at yahoo dot com & just put "gingersnaps" as the subject, & I can give you more detials. :)
Very cute Lindsay! Thanks for sharing.
Super cute tutorial and they really look great! Much better then plastic eggs, I have a few of those sitting around maybe I should try this!
My simple home life
These look awesome! I will definitely be trying it! Thanks for the tutorial.
Love those! Thanks for auditioning for OMTWI!!
Very pretty! Great Idea!
Thanks for linking up to Making It With Allie! I can't wait to see what you have for next week!
AllieMakes.Blogspot.com
I bought a bunch too, I wanted to do the same thing. Now I KNOW it will work, I wondered if the paint would stick too. They turned out SO CUTE!
Visiting from the Creative Crate party. Very cute and creative.
Hi Lindsay,
I made these eggs today and used them for a centerpiece! Check it out at everydayeasy.blogspot.com Thank you for the wonderful tutorial and inspiration!
Sarah
it's so cute ! Thank's for tutorial ! I like the idea !
Super cute Lindsay and I love the tutorial! Wondering... how do the eggs look good now and did the acrylic paint fair well? I organize a neighbourhood OUTDOOR (rain, snow or shine)Easter Egg Hunt and want to paint my 100+ plastic eggs. BUT, I need to know that the paint would not flake off and would last for years. Do you think it would? Thanks!
Hi, Cheryl!
Well, my kids didn't do too much damage to them. Even though they were supposed to be for decoration only, they hid them all over the house and played egg hunt over and over. I think they are a few little chippy spots, but nothing major. I think if I was using them outdoors and wanted them to last a long time, I would spray them with sealer, but I am not sure what they can withstand since we haven't tested them outdoors (yet).
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