Hop to it when making holiday gifts
Five ways to get creative with Easter baskets that are sure to please their young recipients
NEW YORK — With Easter coming up, it’s time to start plotting how to best your kid baskets from last year. Some ideas:
Popcorn creativity
Is there anything more versatile than popcorn?
You can chocofy it, caramelize it or dye it in your favourite Easter hues. Try adding jelly beans or other Easter candy for added colour, and mini marshmallows for texture.
There’s no end to the mixes and flavour combinations. An abundance of recipes already exist on the Internet. Twosisterscrafting.com used salted sweet cream, primary colour jelly beans and pastel sprinkles for an Easter feel.
Make some carrots
Or at least carrot shapes. Look for packs of carrot-shaped cello bags at craft and other stores. Fill them with Reese’s pieces or fishshaped crackers for a carrot orange look, or just fill them with anything you want because the carrot shape is still fun for kids.
Cello-wrapped carrot cargo fits nicely with just about anything else you might want to include in kid Easter baskets. If you’re going for the real-carrot feel, added a little green ribbon at the top.
Ditch the basket
Forget the traditional basket and fill a dump truck, inflatable wading pool or toy shopping cart with gifts and treats. Kids often ditch a basic basket but would have loads of fun with these receptacles as something extra.
A pull wagon would work, or a cartoonor character-themed bucket filled with matching items.
One creative soul on Pinterest made good use of a clear vinyl rain umbrella, laying down a bed of iridescent plastic Easter grass on the inside and nestling toys and treats on top. Others used baseball caps as the catch-all. One twist for what goes inside: Put a chocolate kiss in a plastic egg with a slip of paper that details something you love about the basket recipient, suggests Sherry Richert Belul of the gift site SimplyCelebrate.net.
Lia Griffith, a DIY crafter and designer, made a sturdy Easter basket from upcycled brown paper grocery bags using a woven design. The project takes four to five bags.
Reach for string
You know those string eggs made by soaking yarn or embroidery thread in diluted glue, homemade paste or sugar water, then wrapping it around a water balloon before popping for a lattice look? Take that an extra step for Easter.
One idea: Open up a wide hole and create an Easter diorama, or keep it simple using Easter grass and a large chocolate bunny. Use bright yellow string and your big gap as the wide open mouth of a candy-filled Minion. Add bits of ribbon trim or blingy faux jewels.
Peeps on sticks
There are oh so many things to do with these Easter evergreens as the peeps at Peeps come up with new types and flavours every year. Try poking them with chocolate-dipped and embellished pretzels, or pairing them with other easily pokable treats using kebab skewers.
Wrap your Peeps on sticks in cello and add a colourful tie or ribbon. If playing with melted chocolate and sprinkles isn’t your thing, make a bouquet of Peeps on sticks and arrange them in a vase or basket with Easter grass and other treats.