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Toddler-Approved Halloween Crafts: Ideas That Captivate 2-Year-Olds

Are you wondering what kind of Halloween crafts to make with your two-year-olds? There are lots of wonderful ideas that encourage fine motor development, such as fluffy tissue-paper ghosts, cute paper-cup monsters, and jack-o’-lantern footprint stamps.

This time, we’re introducing Halloween crafts that two-year-olds can enjoy working on, whether at home or in daycare.

Let’s have fun creating an exciting, heart-thumping Halloween world together with the children! Since the children’s creations are treated as works, we use the term “seisaku” (production/creation) in the text.

Irresistible for 2-year-olds! A Special Collection of Halloween Craft Ideas (41–50)

Stamp Ghost

[Preschool Craft] Halloween Wall Decoration! Stamped Ghosts | Halloween Stamp
Stamp Ghost

A wallpaper craft where you stamp ghost shapes and then draw on them creates a unique texture that’s different from simply drawing lines and coloring.

Prepare paper cut out in the shape of a ghost, dab paint onto gauze or cotton, and apply it to the open cutout area to make an original Halloween-style ghost appear on your drawing paper.

Drawing faces on the stamped ghosts is sure to get kids excited.

It’s an enjoyable art project where you can also appreciate the different touches and preferences from younger children to older kids.

A ghost picture with sponge stamps

[Kindergarten/Preschool] Full of individuality with all kinds of ghosts! Ghost-themed drawings and crafts
A ghost picture with sponge stamps

Ghost pictures painted with a sponge are a craft that, thanks to the sponge’s texture, can create the ghostly transparency and eeriness befitting a specter.

Just fix a sponge to a stick such as a disposable chopstick with a rubber band, dab it in paint, and apply it to black construction paper to form the ghost’s shape—fun for all ages.

Adding cut-out eyes and a mouth to the sponge-painted ghost makes it even cuter, and placing them freely—not only in the usual face positions—can give it a unique, original look.

If a child is too young to make the stamp part on their own, an adult should prepare it for them.

Halloween Monsters Made with Sponge Stamps

[Halloween Craft♪] Halloween Monsters Made with Sponge Stamps 👾👻 #preschoolcraft #nurseryteacher #teachingideas #traineenurseryteacher #teacherlife #easy #spongestamp #Halloween #Halloweencraft
Halloween Monsters Made with Sponge Stamps

Would you like to make colorful monsters using sponge stamps? A sponge stamp is a tool like a tampo: wrap a piece of sponge around the tip of a chopstick and secure it with a rubber band.

Dip it in your favorite paint colors and stamp it onto drawing paper with a light pouncing motion.

Once it’s dry, stick on eye and mouth stickers to finish! No matter how many eyes or mouths you add, it turns into a cute monster, so don’t worry about numbers—let the kids place them freely.

That way, they can feel satisfied and accomplished with their creations!

Halloween wreath

[Halloween Craft] Easy Spiderweb Wreath Tutorial (for ages 2–5)
Halloween wreath

A Halloween-themed wreath made with a paper plate is a simple decoration that can liven up any party.

By cutting a paper plate into a donut shape and sticking on torn pieces of origami paper, you can create a one-of-a-kind wreath.

For younger children, they can just do the pasting; for slightly older kids, adding a spiderweb made of thread to the paper plate makes it even more Halloween-like.

However, steps that involve tools—such as cutting out the plate or attaching ribbons—should be prepared by an adult in advance to keep the craft running smoothly, so please give them a hand.

Finger painting

“Finger Painting!” [0- and 1-year-olds] | Torikai Yûiku-en [Nursery School / Kindergarten]
Finger painting

Finger painting, which lets you create wonderfully original artworks using just your fingertips, is a great Halloween craft because even very young children can do it.

Trace shapes like ghosts and pumpkins on construction paper, then dab paint onto them with your fingertips at random to make colorful art.

It’s so easy that you can adapt it not only for Halloween, but also for occasions like Tanabata and Christmas.

It’s a craft we highly recommend trying—your child’s freely colored creations will brighten any event.