VOCATIONAL

Coffee Filter Christmas Tree Ornaments

These coffee filter Christmas tree ornaments are so fun and easy for toddlers and preschoolers to make using paper coffee filters and a few craft gems and jewels.

Not only will young children enjoy the creative process for these pretty ornaments, this craft teaches kids about water absorption and colour blending, and strengthens fine motor skills as well.

You may also like: 6 “Christmas Tree” Crafts for Preschoolers.

The hooligans love using craft jewels to add shimmer and shine to their Christmas crafts. I love offering them at craft time because they give the kids’ fine motor skills a work-out.

coffee filter christmas tree ornamentcoffee filter christmas tree ornament

This is our second coffee filter craft in less than a week!  Last week we made these Ballerina Christmas Ornaments using the same process.

supplies for Coffee filter Christmas tree ornamentssupplies for Coffee filter Christmas tree ornaments

Supplies:

For your conviencience, this post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

* To contain messes and spills we worked on a plastic table cloth.  The ice cube tray was placed in a baking pan to prevent it from being tipped.

Coffee Filter Christmas Tree Instructions:

I put a little water in an ice cube tray.  You don’t need much; you want your colours to be intense.

I added a few drops of food colouring or a squirt of liquid watercolour to each section of the tray.  We used different shades of greens and blues for each section. In some sections I added two colours so the hooligans could stir them together and see some colour-mixing.

painting coffee filters with food colouringpainting coffee filters with food colouring

When they’d finished stirring, the fun began.

Each hooligan dripped, brushed and tapped the coloured water onto their coffee filters.  Some chose to crumple their filters up and dunk them into the water.

If the colours weren’t intense enough, I would add a few drops of food colouring directly onto the wet coffee filters so the kids could swish those around.

green and blue coffee filter dyed with food colouringgreen and blue coffee filter dyed with food colouring

Drying the filters:

You can lay the filters out on a baking sheet to air dry them, or do like we did, and hold them under the heat of a hair-dryer to speed up the process.

green coffee filters dyed with food colouring and liquid watercoloursgreen coffee filters dyed with food colouring and liquid watercolours

Shaping and decorating our coffee filter trees:

Once dry, fold your filter, acordion-style, in half and then in half again.  Don’t aim for perfection here.  It’s nice to see the layers at the bottom of your “Christmas tree”.

Add a little glue between the layers to hold everything in place.  Now it’s time to add some bling!

craft jewels and painted dyed filterscraft jewels and painted dyed filters

The hooligans brushed their coffee filters with glue, and added their jewels to the tree.  I love how our one year old preferred to add her glue directly to the jewels, and place each one individually exactly where she wanted it. Manipulating these tiny jewels provides such a great fine-motor work-out for little fingers!

gluing gems on coffee filter Christmas tree ornamentgluing gems on coffee filter Christmas tree ornament

When the jewels had dried in place, I punched a hole in the top of each tree, and added a silver thread for hanging.

coffee filter chirstmas tree decorationcoffee filter chirstmas tree decoration

Aren’t  they pretty?

coffee tree ornament made by toddlercoffee tree ornament made by toddler

More Holiday Crafts for Kids:

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