Easy Natural Dyed Easter Eggs with Toddlers — A German Tradition

how to make natually dyed eggs

Ever want an Easter activity that’s calm, meaningful, and actually teaches something real… not just another plastic kit? We made natural dyed easter eggs with natural materials, and it turned into one of those slow, cozy moments I wish I could bottle. Like I wish I could have bottled doing this activity as a kid with my grandma.

Now this is basically a German family tradition, at least my family has done this for zig years. My grandma already colored Easter eggs with her mum. And I bet so did she with hers.

🎯 WHAT YOU’LL NEED — Natural Dyed Easter Eggs with Toddlers

  • Hard-boiled eggs (white eggs give a stronger color, brown still works)
  • Red beet → pink/red
  • Turmeric (kurkuma) → bright yellow (gives off a bit of taste)
  • Chamomile tea (soft pastel yellow)
  • Spinach → very soft green tint
  • Blueberries or elderberry juice → purple/lilac
  • Red cabbage → dark purple/ blue
  • Coffee → brown tones
  • Onion skins → traditional warm rusty orange
  • White vinegar (helps color stick)
  • Small jars or cups
  • Spoons (important so tiny hands don’t stain EVERYTHING)
  • Protective mat + messy clothes
Top view of naturally dyed Easter eggs in soft blue, purple, pink, and yellow shades arranged in a recycled cardboard egg carton on a clean light background.

💡 Yes the color STAINS. Capital letters justified 😅
💡 Turmeric was strong — it slightly flavored the eggs.
💡 We boiled the eggs first because toddler + stirring = safer outcome.

Optional swaps:
• no vegetables → tea or coffee works
• younger toddler → just transferring eggs is enough


🛠️ HOW TO SET UP — Natural Easter Egg Dye Toddler Activity

There are actually two traditional methods we used in our family.

Method 1 — Boil Eggs in the Natural Dye

1️⃣ Chop plant material and simmer in water ~20 minutes.
2️⃣ Remove plant pieces.
3️⃣ Add a splash of vinegar.
4️⃣ Add raw eggs and cook about 10 minutes.
5️⃣ Leave eggs in dye longer for deeper color.

Method 2 — Pre-Boil Eggs (What We Did With Toddler)

1️⃣ Prepare hard boiled eggs ahead of time.
2️⃣ Prepare vegetable dye separately. (Boild for 20 minutes).
3️⃣ Let dye cool to warm. Add a splash of vinegar.
4️⃣ Place eggs into dye and let toddler help gently.
5️⃣ Leave eggs soaking for stronger color. It took much longer than I expected.

Three stainless steel pots filled with natural plant dye baths in deep red and green tones photographed from above on a minimal kitchen background.

👉 I prefer this method with toddlers — less risk of broken eggs and more control.

Pro tip:
Use a spoon to move eggs so you don’t get stained fingers or fingerprints on the shells.

For shine:
Rub dry eggs with a tiny bit of plant oil.

Ratio that works consistently for us:

  • 1 liter water
  • 3–4 handfuls plant material OR 300 ml juice
  • Simmer 20–30 minutes
  • Strain
  • Add 1–2 tbsp vinegar
  • Dye eggs 10 minutes OR soak several hours for deep color

White eggs = bright colors
Brown eggs = earthy, muted tones (still beautiful, just moodier)


🎯 HOW WE DID THE ACTIVITY — our real experience

He was 1.5 years old when we first did this together. Honestly… probably a bit young, but he loved being part of something real.

This activity is very personal to me because I used to dye eggs naturally with my grandma. She used onion skins and plant dyes, and I still remember standing next to her watching the color slowly appear. She’s not with us anymore, so showing this tradition to my son felt really emotional… in a quiet, soft way.

We sat together and I talked about everything — what color comes from which plant, what happens in the water… basically me talking at him while he listened and snacked blueberries 😄

He helped:
✔ place eggs into the jars
✔ stir gently (much softer than I expected!)
✔ observe color changes

Overhead flat lay of glass jars filled with natural egg dyes in purple, yellow, and dark red tones with spoons inside, arranged neatly on a bright neutral background.

And yes… blueberries were partly dye, partly snack.

Afterwards we let the eggs sit longer to deepen color.

Bonus ingredients people rarely mention, but I’ve heard off:

These I’ve heard off and want to try next:

  • Hibiscus tea → smoky purple
  • Red wine → marbled mauve
  • Avocado skins/pits → blush pink
  • Carrot tops → pale yellow-green
  • Turmeric + red cabbage mix → moss green

🧠 WHAT TODDLERS LEARN — Montessori Easter Activity

Even very young toddlers gain a lot here:

✔ Practical life skills — stirring, placing, waiting and the whole idea of natural dyes.
✔ Cause & effect — food changes color
✔ Sensory exploration — warm, smooth, wet textures
✔ Cultural traditions
✔ Early color learning
✔ Vocabulary exposure
→ dye, natural, turmeric, spinach, tradition

This is real-world learning. Montessori calls this meaningful work.

RELATED: 👉 Spring Montessori Activities for Toddlers: Real-life seasonal learning ideas to try.


📌 MY HONEST THOUGHTS

This activity is a really easy practical life skill activity:
Not too messy, a bit long so prep ahead .

Things I learned:
• turmeric stains EVERYTHING
• white eggs show color best, brown eggs work too.
• boiled eggs are safer for toddlers, plus a great snack in between.
• vinegar really deepens color
• messy clothes are not optional

Both family methods worked — boiling in dye or soaking pre-boiled eggs. Honestly I’m not sure which is “better”. With my grandma we boiled them directly. With my mum we soaked them after. Both created beautiful results.

I loved that this wasn’t just craft time. It was tradition. Memory. Learning. And connection.


📍 FAQ — Natural Egg Dye with Toddlers

Q: What foods dye eggs naturally?
Beets, turmeric, spinach, blueberries, elderberry juice, onion skins, coffee, tea, red cabbage, chili and many more.

Q: How long should eggs soak?
At least 30 minutes. Several hours gives deeper color. Tumeric doesn’t take that long.

Q: Are natural dyes safe for toddlers?
Yes — they’re food-based. Still supervise closely.


🔗 Related Spring Crafts for Toddlers

Since we made this for spring, you might also love:

🐞Easter Crafts To Try With Your Toddler – our Masterpost

🐄 Farm Animals Activities Masterpost – All our farm crafts in one place.

🐞 Bug Crafts for Toddlers Masterpost – More simple insect ideas.

🌷 Spring Crafts and Activities Masterpost – Seasonal crafts we’ve been loving lately.

farm animal activities for toddlers pim
bug crafts and activities (2)

💬 Your Turn

If you try this activity I would LOVE to see it. We are on Fb, Insta and TikTok.
Tag me so I can cheer you on: #mommyscrafttime

Want more simple toddler activities that don’t require prep or perfection?

👉 Join my free mum community for ideas, support and real life play inspiration:

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Three stainless steel pots filled with natural plant dye baths in deep red and green tones photographed from above on a minimal kitchen background.

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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

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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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