Easy Valentine’s Salt Dough Heart Ornaments for Toddlers (Calm & Meaningful)

header valentines hearts craft salt dough

If you’re looking for a Valentine’s activity your toddler can do with you, not alone, while you’re nearby — this one is honest, calm, and meaningful.

Before we start: Do you usually craft in the morning or afternoon with your toddler? This activity worked best for us earlier in the day.

🎯 What You’ll Need

For the Salt Dough

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 cup salt
  • ¾ cup water (start with less)

Optional but fun:

  • Food coloring (we used red and blue — it turned a soft pink and baby blue)
  • Cinnamon (for a cozy smell)
  • A little pink and blue glitter

Tools

  • Rolling pin
  • Heart & star cookie cutters (smaller worked best for us)
  • Baking paper or tray
  • Plastic wrap + container (for storing dough)
  • Play Dough toys to keep my toddler busy lol

💡 This is only “low prep” if you already have salt dough — otherwise, making the dough is part of the activity (and the learning). You can store it up to 3 months.


🛠️ How to Make the Salt Dough (Step-by-Step)

Step 1:
Mix flour and salt in a bowl.

Step 2:
Slowly add water, starting with less than ¾ cup.
Knead until soft but not sticky.

Step 3:
Add food coloring (you’ll need more than expected!) and knead well.
We also mixed in a little glitter. You can wear plastic gloves to avoid staining your hands.

Step 4:
Let your toddler help knead and explore the dough.
Wrap leftovers in plastic wrap and store in a container in the fridge — ours lasted weeks.

💡 I was surprised how much food coloring was needed — but once mixed, the dough didn’t stain hands beyond the initial mixing.


🛠️ How to Set Up the Valentine’s Salt Dough Heart Ornaments (Step-by-Step)

Step 1:
Roll out the dough on baking paper.

Step 2:
Let your toddler press the cookie cutters into the dough.

Step 3:
Lift shapes carefully — smaller cutters were easier and didn’t tear.

Step 4:
(Optional) Use a straw or skewer to make holes for hanging (we skipped this step and did it later).

Step 5:
Place ornaments on baking paper to dry.


🎯 How to Do the Activity (What It Looked Like for Us)

This wasn’t independent play — and that’s okay.

My son (28 months) stayed right next to me while we worked.
He helped roll the dough, pressed the heart and star shapes, and then played freely with leftover dough using play dough tools, making his own creations on the side.

It felt much more like quality time than a “set-and-forget” activity — calm, focused, and unrushed.


🧠 What They’re Learning Here

  • Where play dough comes from (huge concept!)
  • How cookies are made (rolling, cutting, shaping)
  • Tool use: rolling pin & cookie cutters
  • New vocabulary: roll, press, heart, star, soft, flat
  • Patience & process
  • Memory-making (this one really matters)

🔗 Related Resources

A collection of creative, hands-on activities for toddlers and preschoolers who love insects and art.

Bug Crafts And Activities.

This is very Montessori-aligned — process over product.


📌 My Honest Thoughts / Real-Life Notes

  • Making the dough is medium mess
  • His hands got salty, and a small scratch stung a bit — worth knowing
  • Food coloring looked intense at first but didn’t transfer later
  • Smaller cookie cutters = way less frustration
  • This is cheap — we even used old flour my mum was going to throw away

👉 Best setup tip:
Use a highchair or contained space, keep the vacuum nearby, and accept a bit of mess.


🔥 Drying Options (Both Work)

✅ Air-Dry (What We Did)

  • Let dry 24 hours
  • Flip
  • Dry another 24–48 hours
    Perfect if you used glitter.

🔥 Bake

  • Slow & safe:
    200°F (90°C) for 2–3 hours, flipping halfway (check sometimes)
  • Faster option:
    180°C for ~1 hour (check often)

I forgot to fliplast time and got lumps — it happens 😅


📍 FAQ

Q: What age is this best for?
A: Roughly 2–6 years, depending on expectations.

Q: Is this really low mess?
A: Medium mess — dough-making is the messiest part.

Q: Can toddlers do this alone?
A: No — but they’ll be happily busy next to you.


🔗 Related Resource

📸 How to Make Salt Dough Handprint Ornaments (Step-by-Step)
This is where I first tried salt dough and explain it in more detail.
👉 Our Ultimate List of Valentines Crafts. And

👉 Valentine’s Activities for the Whole Family.


💬 Your Turn

Have you tried salt dough with your toddler yet — or would this be your first time?
I love seeing how different kids approach the same activity. Tag me on Insta, tik tok etc, #mommyscrafttime 🙂


What’s next?

✨ Want more honest toddler activities that fit real days (and real energy levels)?
👉 Join my Skool community for calm play ideas, routines, and support. It’s totally free. OR
👉 Grab my bimonthly toddler activity magazine with seasonal crafts & printables.

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About the Author

Carina is the creative mind behind Mommy’s Craft Time, where she helps parents turn everyday moments into fun, hands-on learning experiences for toddlers. With a passion for sensory play, crafts, and early language development, she shares simple, engaging activities that spark creativity and support cognitive growth.

Whether it’s DIY sensory bins, seasonal crafts, or language-rich activities, she strives to make learning fun and stress-free for parents and kids alike

Welcome to our little corner! I started this blog so I’d be forced to try new and fun activities with Luca. Some things I try work. Some are utter failures, but even that is fun. Here, I share ideas to help other mums focus on the magic of small moments, because sometimes it’s the littlest things that become the most memorable.

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