Here is a quick question: are you eating enough vegetables? More importantly, do you know exactly how much you—and your children—are supposed to be eating?
If you are unsure, you are certainly not alone. Studies consistently show that globally, both adults and children are consuming far below the recommended daily intake of fresh produce. Adults should generally aim for about 2.5 to 3 cups of vegetables a day, while children need between 1 to 1.5 cups, depending on their age.
A simple rule of thumb? Fill half your plate with vegetables at every meal.
To help turn the tide on these statistics, we celebrate National Eat Your Vegetables Day on June 17th. But let’s be honest—convincing a picky toddler or a skeptical six-year-old to eat broccoli can be a battle.
That is where art comes in. Psychologists and nutritionists suggest that “food exposure” doesn’t just happen at the dinner table. When kids play with the shapes, colors, and textures of vegetables through crafts, they become more familiar with them. A child who has just made a fun “Broccoli Tree” is often more willing to taste the real thing.
Here are 20 vibrant vegetable crafts for kids to spark creativity and encourage healthy habits!
Root Vegetable Crafts
1. Carrot Footprint Art
This is a wonderful keepsake for babies and toddlers.
- The Idea: Use your child’s footprint to create a carrot!
- How to do it: Paint the bottom of your child’s foot orange and stamp it onto white paper (toes pointing up). The foot shape creates the tapered carrot root. Once dry, use green paint or green yarn to create the leafy tops springing from the toes.
2. Potato Stamping
The classic veggie craft that never gets old. Potatoes are sturdy and easy to carve.
- The Idea: Create custom stamps using raw potatoes.
- How to do it: Cut a large potato in half. Use a plastic knife or cookie cutter to carve a shape into the flat surface (stars, hearts, or letters). Dip in paint and stamp away! This teaches children about the texture of raw vegetables.
3. “Wooly” Parsnips and Carrots
A fine motor skill workout using yarn.
- The Idea: Wrapping cardboard shapes to create textured veggies.
- How to do it: Cut triangle shapes out of cardboard. Give the child orange yarn (for carrots) or cream yarn (for parsnips). Have them wrap the yarn tightly around the cardboard until it is fully covered. Tie green ribbon at the top for the greens.
4. Radish Egg Carton Garden
Upcycling meets gardening in this cute 3D craft.
- The Idea: Turning trash into a vibrant veggie patch.
- How to do it: Cut the individual cups out of an egg carton. Paint the outside bright pink/red and the bottom tip white (to mimic a radish). Glue green pipe cleaners to the top for leaves. You can “plant” these in a sensory bin filled with black beans (soil).
Leafy Green & Cruciferous Crafts
5. Broccoli Tree Painting
Use the vegetable itself as the paintbrush!
- The Idea: Replicating the texture of leaves using broccoli florets.
- How to do it: Pour green shades of paint onto a plate. Let your child dip a raw piece of broccoli into the paint and stamp it onto paper. The bumpy texture looks exactly like tree leaves. Paint a brown trunk underneath.
6. Bubble Wrap Corn on the Cob
Corn is a favorite for many kids, and this craft emphasizes its unique texture.
- The Idea: Simulating kernels using bubble wrap.
- How to do it: Cut bubble wrap into a long oval shape. Paint the bubbly side yellow. Press it onto white paper to transfer the print—it looks just like corn kernels! Add green paper husks on the sides.
7. Crumpled Paper Lettuce
A sensory craft that creates a 3D effect.
- The Idea: Using tissue paper to mimic the layers of a lettuce head.
- How to do it: Cut a paper plate in half. Provide the child with squares of light green and dark green tissue paper. Have them crumple the squares into loose balls and glue them densely onto the paper plate. It looks like a fresh, crunchy salad bowl!
8. Celery Rose Stamps
Did you know the base of a celery stalk creates a perfect flower print?
- The Idea: Using food waste to make art.
- How to do it: Instead of throwing away the base of the celery bunch, dip it in red or pink paint. Stamp it onto paper. The natural arrangement of the stalks creates a beautiful rose pattern.
Colorful Fruiting Vegetables
9. Paper Plate Tomato
Great for learning about geometry and fractions.
- The Idea: A simple, big red tomato.
- How to do it: Paint a paper plate bright red. Cut a green star shape out of construction paper and glue it to the top center for the calyx (the green leafy part). You can cut the plate in half to discuss “half vs. whole.”
10. Peas in a Pod
A cozy craft that focuses on counting.
- The Idea: Making a snug little pod for peas.
- How to do it: Cut a green paper plate in half. Paint three or four cotton balls green (or use green pom-poms). Glue the “peas” onto one side of the plate, then staple the other side over it slightly curved, like an open pod.
11. Bell Pepper Shamrocks
Another stamping activity using the unique cross-section of a vegetable.
- The Idea: Bell peppers (especially 3 or 4-lobed ones) make perfect shamrock or flower shapes.
- How to do it: Cut the pepper horizontally. Dip the cut edge into green paint to make clovers, or red paint to make abstract flowers.
12. 3D Paper Strip Pumpkin
This craft introduces kids to engineering and volume.
- The Idea: Making a spherical pumpkin out of flat paper.
- How to do it: Cut 8-10 strips of orange paper (about 1 inch wide). Punch a hole at both ends of the stack. Use a brass fastener (brad) to secure the bottom and another for the top. Fan the strips out to form a ball shape. Add a green stem.
13. Fingerprint Corn Stalks
A messy, fun art project for preschoolers.
- The Idea: Using fingertips to make individual corn kernels.
- How to do it: Draw a corn stalk outline. Let the child dip their finger in yellow paint and dab, dab, dab to fill in the cob. It requires patience and focus!
Educational & Functional Veggie Crafts
14. Vegetable Corner Bookmarks
Encourage reading and healthy eating simultaneously.
- The Idea: Origami bookmarks that look like veggies.
- How to do it: Fold a square piece of paper into a standard origami corner bookmark. Decorate it to look like a strawberry, a carrot, or an eggplant. Every time they open their book, they get a visual reminder to eat their 5-a-day!
15. The “Eat a Rainbow” Collage
This teaches the nutritional concept of eating varied colors.
- The Idea: A sorting activity turned into art.
- How to do it: Divide a paper into color sections (Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Purple). Have kids cut pictures of vegetables out of grocery circulars or magazines and glue them into the correct color zone.
16. Clay Veggie Magnets
A project for older kids using air-dry clay.
- The Idea: Sculpting miniature vegetables.
- How to do it: Shape air-dry clay into tiny carrots, peas, or broccoli. Once dry, paint them with acrylics. Glue a small magnet to the back. Use them to hold up the grocery list on the fridge!
17. Paper Weaving Corn
Excellent for fine motor skills and pattern recognition.
- The Idea: Weaving yellow and white paper.
- How to do it: Cut a corn shape out of yellow paper and cut vertical slits in the middle. Weave strips of white or lighter yellow paper through the slits to create the “kernels” texture.
18. Eggplant Collage
Focusing on the color purple, which is rare in nature.
- The Idea: Using mixed media to fill a shape.
- How to do it: Draw a large eggplant. Give the child scraps of purple fabric, purple paper, and purple foam. Have them glue the scraps to fill the shape. This explores texture and shades of a single color.
19. Accordion Fold Cucumber Snake
A kinetic craft that moves!
- The Idea: A bouncy, green cucumber.
- How to do it: Fold a long strip of green paper back and forth (accordion style). Draw a face on the front fold. It looks like a long cucumber (or a pickle) that can stretch out and bounce back.
20. Felt Vegetable Garden
A quiet toy for imaginative play.
- The Idea: No-sew veggies for a play kitchen.
- How to do it: Cut vegetable shapes out of stiff felt sheets. Details like tomato seeds or carrot lines can be drawn with markers or glued on. These are durable and great for pretend cooking.
Why Crafts Help with Picky Eaters
You might be wondering, “How does making a paper carrot help my child eat a real one?”
The answer lies in desensitization. For many children, new foods are scary. They have unpredictable textures and strong tastes. By removing the pressure to eat the vegetable and replacing it with the pressure-free fun of crafting the vegetable, you are building a bridge.
- Discussion Starters: While gluing the “Peas in a Pod,” you can say, “Did you know peas are sweet and pop in your mouth?”
- Positive Association: Vegetables become associated with fun, colors, and time spent with you, rather than a battle of wills at the dinner table.
So, on this Eat Your Vegetables Day, grab the glue stick and the construction paper. You might just find that after making a delicious-looking paper salad, your little ones are ready to try the real thing!