Natural Egg Dye

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Looking to avoid artificial colors when you dye eggs this Easter? Look no further than your own fridge to make beautiful shades, whether you plan to dye real eggs or vegan ones! Travis helped me craft this deep purple from nothing more than cabbage.

In a saucepan, combine 4 cups water, 2 cups sliced red cabbage, and 2 tablespoons white vinegar.

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Bring to a boil, then simmer for 45 minutes.

Strain the mixture through a sieve into a bowl, and discard the solids. Add your eggs to the bowl and let stand for a few hours. The longer the eggs sit, the better the color. This didn’t work great with our ceramic eggs, but the plastic ones picked up the color!

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If you want a few more color ideas, try either: 4 cups water with 2 tablespoons ground turmeric and the vinegar for a yellow; or 4 cups water with 4 cups chopped beets and the vinegar for a red.

Colorful Confetti Eggs

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We love creating our monthly craft from High Five magazine… so I was a bit dismayed when we saw that this month’s project was decidedly not vegan. Cascarones are confetti-filled eggs, traditionally made in Mexico during Easter and crushed over a friend’s head as a surprise. Although it’s easy to paint or dye wooden eggs for vegan kids, how were we going to make a vegan egg that could crack? With a little advanced planning and some ingenuity, we made it work!

First, I searched online for hollow vegan chocolate eggs, and was rewarded with Peek-a-Boos from No Whey Chocolates. This actually have a little white chocolate chick inside, but still plenty of room for confetti!

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It took a few tries before we learned how much pressure was needed to crack the eggs with a butter knife, but we got a small hole in a few of them. Don’t make the hole right at the apex of the oval, or the chocolate egg will cleave in half.

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Travis of course needed to do a taste test at this point! I recommend setting aside a few of the eggs for eating, since the ones you’re about to use for the rest of the project won’t remain edible.

Next up we painted our eggs. Since we were painting on chocolate, we used food coloring.

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Roll a piece of paper into a funnel, and insert into the opening you’ve made in each egg. Carefully pour in confetti through the funnel.

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Finally, we glued a colored piece of tissue paper (pastel, in keeping with the Easter theme!) over the hole we’d made in each egg. Set aside to dry.

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Now of course you won’t really want to crush these over a friend’s head – unless you enjoy shampooing chocolate out of your hair!

Instead, I set up a large surface area covered with newspaper and gave Travis a mallet and let him go to town crushing the eggs. Perhaps they weren’t exactly cascarones, but I’m glad we were able to capture the spirit of the craft!

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We’ll be hopping toward Easter with a few other crafts this week, so stay tuned!

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Tissue Paper Eggs

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This morning Travis found his old baby toys in a bin, and dove into it with delight. It’s always a laugh to see the way that older kids go back and play with things they used as babies, inevitably in inventive and different ways. He was particularly enamored with an old bird shape-sorting toy, so we decided to make eggs for the birds!

The process was simple and fun – crumple sheets of tissue paper into little balls. Travis went to town with this, and I neatened them up a bit into ovals as he finished each one.

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To finish your eggs, wrap with colored tape. Masking tape would work well, but we had decorative washi tape that seemed even better, since it reminded me of the decorative blown eggs I learned to make in elementary school (in pre-vegan days!)

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Travis was very deliberate in deciding which tape pattern should wind around which egg, until we had a beautiful assortment.

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And then the birdies got to sit in their new nest!

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