Need something simple and seasonal? These acorn crafts for kids are a great way to keep little hands busy with paint, paper, and a sprinkle of imagination.
From handprint keepsakes to cereal-covered textures, each idea is designed with kids in mind and is perfect for a cozy afternoon at home or in the classroom.
Want more autumn inspiration? Check out our full lineup of fall crafts for kids for even more seasonal fun.
Pin
This post may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate and a participant in other affiliate programs, I earn a commission on qualifying purchases. Read our disclosure policy.
Pin
Paper Plate Acorn
Kids will have a blast transforming a plain paper plate into an adorable acorn for fall. They get to paint the plate, cut out a few simple template pieces for the acorn's cap (and maybe a sweet face), and glue it all together.It's an easy art activity that lets children be creative with paint and scissors, and they'll be proud to display their cute acorn once they finish.
With a handful of jumbo popsicle sticks, kids can create a super cute acorn friend to celebrate the season. They glue the sticks into an acorn shape, paint them brown, and add fun touches like googly eyes, a foam cap, rosy painted cheeks, and even a little twine bow.This adorable acorn art is simple and makes a lovely fall keepsake or decoration that kids will love to show off.Related: Acorn Worksheets
Try this acorn project that doubles as a keepsake featuring your child's photo for a personal touch. Kids glue wide sticks into an acorn shape, paint them brown, and then attach a paper acorn cap and a colorful paper leaf. Finally, they stick a small photo to the front with the words “My Little Nut.”If you add a magnet to the back, you have an adorable fridge decoration that the whole family will adore.
Kids can make a fall tree that proudly displays their name spelled out on little acorn cutouts. They'll cut and glue together a paper tree with colorful leaves, then add acorn-shaped letters to the branches to spell their name.It's a fun autumn project that doubles as a learning activity, helping children creatively practice letter recognition and spelling.
Your little ones can lend a hand in making this acorn art project. They'll paint their hand with acorn-colored art paint and stamp it on paper to create the acorn's body, then use a paintbrush to add a big brown acorn cap on top of the handprint.It's a quick and cute fall activity that even toddlers can do, and each painted handprint acorn becomes a special keepsake of your child's growing hands.Also try: Little Acorn Book Activities
Oats and chocolate cereal turn a simple paper acorn into a textured fall masterpiece kids will love creating. After drawing the shape on a brown grocery bag, little hands can pour, sprinkle, and press the cereal into glue, adding a fun sensory element to the process.Once it dries, the finished piece has a bumpy, real-looking feel that is perfect for fall decorating or preschool display.
Inspired by the story “Little Acorn,” this project lets kids re-create an acorn's journey as it gets buried in the ground. Children assemble a cute paper acorn that looks tucked into the soil, capturing the moment an acorn rests under the earth, waiting to grow.It's an adorable way to blend story time with art time and help kids learn how acorns grow into oak trees.
A painted paper plate, cardstock cutouts, and simple yarn threading create a playful acorn with woven texture. Kids can practice fine motor skills by stitching white yarn through punched holes, then finish it off with colorful leaves and googly eyes for extra personality.With big templates and easy steps, it's a great hands-on fall project for preschoolers and older kids.Related: Acorn Paper Bag Craft
Kids will love how this clever project combines a handprint keepsake with a fun lacing activity to create one adorable acorn. First, children lace a cardboard acorn cap with yarn (like sewing with a child-safe needle), then they attach their handprint cutout underneath as the acorn's bottom.Threading the yarn is excellent fine motor practice, and the finished acorn has a lovely homemade look, complete with your child's hand as part of the art!
Little hands can strengthen their fine motor skills by tearing up paper to make this colorful acorn activity. Kids rip brown and orange paper into small pieces and glue them onto an acorn template, creating a fun mosaic texture for the acorn's cap and nut.They'll love the sensory fun of ripping paper, and the finished acorn shows off a cool patchwork of fall colors that's perfect for displaying on the fridge or wall.
Who knew a simple paper bag could become a plump, playful acorn character? In this project, kids stuffed and shaped a brown paper bag to look like an acorn, then decorated it with a drawn or painted face and fun details to give it a unique personality.The finished “acorn portraits” are so cute to display, and you can even hide little treats or notes inside them for an entertaining fall surprise.
No paint is needed for this handprint acorn art, making it a perfect mess-free project for a cozy fall day indoors. All you need is some brown paper for tracing your child's hand, plus scissors and glue, to turn that handprint cutout into a cute acorn (complete with a smiling face).Kids will love seeing their hand shape become a happy acorn buddy, and you'll have a sweet keepsake to remember how small those hands once were.
Give kids a bottle of black-tinted glue and they can create a striking acorn design that almost looks like stained glass. They start by cutting out a big acorn shape from brown paper, then use the special black glue to outline the acorn and draw a cool criss-cross pattern on the acorn's cap.It's a simple project that builds hand strength and control as children squeeze and swirl the glue, and the bold black outlines make their acorn art stand out.
Kids can transform a simple paper acorn cutout into an adorable little character with bendable arms and legs. Using a handy template, they'll cut and assemble the paper acorn with a cheerful face and attach fuzzy pipe cleaner arms and legs to bring it to life.Once it's all put together, children will have fun posing their acorn friend in silly ways and playing with their new fall buddy.
Sam is the crafter and founder of Simple Everyday Mom. She has been featured in Oprah Mag, Good Housekeeping, The Spruce Crafts, Country Living, The Bump, and more.