Bunnies from Upcycled Spools

I saw this idea years back and fell in love with it!  How darling are these bunnies!

The idea couldn’t be simpler:

–Use an empty spool (If you don’t sew, ask friends/neighbors/family/Freecycle, etc.  If you DO sew, you have PLENTY of these.)

–Wrap a small piece of decorative paper around.  (Scraps of paper, upcycled magazines or catalogs, old maps, damaged books, etc.)

–Draw a bunny face.

–Add ears (I don’t love the thought of people buying new pipe cleaners for these, but we had some on hand (I un-do old projects from the kids to reuse these).  You could also use paper clips, as seen in one bunny above.  Get creative!  I’m sure this is a great opportunity for reuse!

–We happened to have pom-poms on hand as well (from old projects, etc.), but you could also make bunny tails from crumpled scrap paper or any number of upcycled items.

 

I LOVE that these reuse spools!!

I LOVE that these are a homemade decoration instead of a store-bought one (New, store-bought items have transportation, manufacturing, packaging waste, financial cost, afterlife of the items, and more to consider.)

I LOVE that my kids can be involved in making these!  My daughter made a collection of these this year, and my 3-year old made at least a couple of them too! (see below)

Upcycled spool bunnies could make a super-cute gift as well!  Even a ‘kit’ to make these would be a fun little spring present!

 

Easter Egg Hunts-Reducing and Reusing

I love spring!  Especially this one, when a feeling of hope is slowly settling in.  I loved Easter as a child–wearing a special dress, being outside, having exciting egg hunts full of clues written by our Easter Bunny.  As a parent, I’ve worked hard to make the holiday special without indulging in some of the wastefulness or excessive treats.  Our bunny fills our eco-friendly eggs with a variety of alternative items, depending on the year.  But, thinking about Easter events in the community gives me a bit of a shudder…

I cringe at the thought of fields of egg hunts–plastic eggs, that, let’s face it, most parents end up tossing in the landfill (AHHHHH!) and cheap trinkets that end up with the same fate.  Many of these “hunts” aren’t even hunts; they are just grab fests.  Which kid can run out there and grab the most-type of situation.  To me, there is no redeeming piece to these hunts.  Sure, I’d love for our kids to have a fun celebration of spring with the community, but if it means participating in this environmentally-horrific, greed race, then I’ll have to pass.

I did ask our local community member in charge of one such event if they had a plan in place so that parents could place the plastic eggs in a bin to be reused the following year.  The answer? – No.  They buy their eggs pre-stuffed (with cheap, plastic toys) so there was no way she could make this work.

I have been to some small-scale hunts that were more conscious.  Instead of cheap, throw-away trinkets, the eggs held papers for collecting to choose from a table of more quality items.  The hunt was an actual hunt and the eggs were collected at the end to be reused the following year.  Huzzah to that.

Since we don’t do many mainstream sweets, our Easter Bunny had some thinking to do.  We picked up some Eco-eggs years ago at our local natural food shop.  They’re great!  Large and sturdy and beautiful colors.  We’ve still somehow ended up with some of the super cheap kind too, and the difference between the two types of eggs is incredible.  When our first-born was young, each egg held a tiny sticker on Easter.  As the kids have grown, the eggs sometimes hold pieces of Lego from a small set that needs to be built.  I’ve also heard of Bunnies who put puzzle pieces in each egg or seed packets.  Our bunny puts picture clues in each egg so the kids can each find a trail of eggs.

The kids’ baskets don’t contain much–just the first clue, really.  (And definitely NO plastic grass!  But sometimes fun, shredded old magazines.)  This year, Easter Bunny may include some homemade bath bombs (by request).  I think the fun of the hunt is really at the heart of everything, not so much what’s inside.  Our kids make their own egg hunts throughout the year–sometimes just because or sometimes on each other’s birthdays.

Here’s a picture of our Eco eggs and the felt eggs I made as well.  There are also hollow wooden eggs out there and many crafty ideas online or to buy on Etsy.  We just leave the eggs out a couple days before Easter for the Bunny to come pick up.

Visit my Pinterest page for a visual of some ideas!

Another alternative