If you’re looking for a paper roll bee craft for toddlers that’s calming, simple, and actually keeps your child engaged, this one is a real win — especially on overstimulating days – like we had after Christmas…

If your toddler is overstimulated and bouncing from one thing to the next, sometimes they don’t need more excitement — they need something slow and focused.
This paper roll bee craft became a calm reset for us, and my toddler stayed with it far longer than I expected – a wooping 45 mins in total. Below I’ll show you how we made it, what your toddler learns, and how to keep it stress-free.
✨ Where This Activity Fits Into Real Mum Life
- Prep time: about 5 minutes
- Best time to do it: morning or early day
- Engagement time: around 45 minutes total (with a break)

We started this craft in the morning, took a break after adding the stripes, and finished it later in the afternoon. There was no pressure to finish in one go — which made the whole experience much calmer. I honestly wasn’t even sure we’d finish it at all.
This isn’t a tired-toddler, end-of-day activity. It works best when your toddler still has some focus and needs a calm reset, not stimulation.
🎯 What You’ll Need
- Empty toilet paper roll
- Yellow finger paint (or some yellow paper)
- Black paper (for stripes)
- 2 googly eyes
- Black pipe cleaners (antennae)
- White pipe cleaners (wings)
- Small beads (for threading)
- Glue
- Scissors
- Optional: acrylic paint or marker for details
Tip: Finger paint alone wasn’t strong enough for us, so I reinforced the color later with acrylic paint while my toddler stayed busy.
🛠️ How to Set Up
- Collect all materials (about 5 minutes).
- Paint the toilet paper roll yellow and let it dry. I cut the shape of the head out. Make sure to leave some toilet paper roll on the sites or the head will not be connected to the back.
- Cut black paper into stripes together.
- Glue the stripes onto the roll.

- Add googly eyes.

- Attach pipe cleaners for antennae and wings. I used clothes pins to keep the antennae in place and made a hole for the wings.
- Thread beads onto the antennae ends.
🎯 How to Do the Activity
This works best as a slow craft.
- My toddler helped paint the roll.
- He cut and glued the black stripes (with help).
- He stuck on the googly eyes.
- He loved threading the beads onto the pipe cleaners.
I handled the parts that needed extra stability and supervision.
After finishing, the bee immediately turned into a toy. There was lots of gentle “buzzing,” flying around, and even explaining that the bee makes honey — which was incredibly sweet to watch.

🧠 What Your Toddler Is Learning
- Fine motor skills (cutting, gluing, threading beads)
- Pincer grasp and hand strength
- Focus and sustained attention
- Emotional regulation through calm, repetitive actions
- Early pretend play and storytelling
📌 My Honest Thoughts
This wasn’t a toddler-only activity — I had to supervise, and yes, my toddler still got black paint on his fingers. But there were no tantrums, no rushing, and no distractions.
What I loved most was how much he adored the bee. He still plays with it and uses it together with other toilet paper roll insects we’ve made as “friends.” Seeing the craft turn into lasting play made it completely worth it.
If you want it less messy you can consider to pre-paint the bee body.
📍 FAQ
What age is this best for?
Around 2 years and up. My son is 28 months, and this was a great fit.
Is this a calm-down activity?
Yes — perfect for overstimulated toddlers who need a reset.
Is it messy?
Minimal, especially if you pre-paint.
Do you have to finish it in one sitting?
No. Taking breaks actually made it better.
🔗 Related Resource

Related: More Threading Activities for Toddlers
A collection of low-prep, threading activities you can rotate through real mum days.
💬 Your Turn
If you try this paper roll bee craft, I’d love to see it 🐝
Every toddler’s bee ends up with its own personality — and that’s half the fun. ✨ Want more calm, realistic toddler activities that actually fit real life? Than I hope we’ll meet in my toddler activity Skool Community. It’s free 🙂
👉 Join the Skool community here
OR
👉 Grab my bi-monthly magazine with seasonal activities, calm crafts, and ready-to-use printables. This is the latest one with winter activities and crafts.
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