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I love a cute Easter craft, but I don’t like the usual mess or the pressure to buy a bunch of pricey supplies. So I started gathering Easter egg designs that are easy to recreate with Sharpies, markers, and other budget-friendly materials. Below are 7 of my favorites that still turned out colorful and special enough for the holiday.

Bunny Face Easter EggsSprinkle Easter EggsTie-Dye EggsThumbprint Bunny Bedazzled Easter EggsGalaxy EggsDecoupage Easter EggsMORE SEASONAL PROJECTS: 7 CLEVER SPRING ORGANIZATION HACKS

I use these Artistro paint pens for basically every project on this list, and they’re my go-to markers for crafts time with the kids. We pull them out every year for Easter because the colors actually stay vibrant on the shells without fading or bleeding into a muddy mess. Definitely worth grabbing if you want an easy, smudge-free art day!

For my own bedazzled eggs, I actually just used some leftover rhinestones I had laying around from a sewing project. I definitely wouldn’t recommend letting the little kids help with this one since the gems are super tiny and totally a choking hazard, but they’re perfect if you want to sit down and make a fancy, sparkly egg for yourself. If you’re wondering, I get my rhinestones right here:

I was anticipating the usual dye mess all over the kitchen table, but this spinning egg decorator turned out to be genuinely brilliant. My toddler just held a marker to the shell while it spun, and we ended up with perfectly striped eggs without a single drop of dye to clean up. Perfect not just for Easter, but for bonding time with the kids!

1. Are eggs decorated with markers and acrylic paint safe to eat? If you’re using permanent markers, acrylic paint pens, or regular Mod Podge, the eggs should strictly be used for display purposes only, as the ink and chemicals can seep through the porous shells. If you want to eat your creations later, stick to food-safe food coloring, or use the whisked egg-white method mentioned in the Decoupage tutorial!

2. Why is my marker ink smudging and bleeding on the shell? The most common culprit is condensation! If your hard-boiled eggs just came out of the fridge, as they warm up, they will “sweat.” This moisture causes permanent marker and paint pen ink to bleed and smudge. Always make sure your eggs are completely dry and have reached room temperature before you start drawing.

3. Can I use fake eggs for these crafts instead of real ones? Absolutely! Given the high grocery store prices right now, swapping real eggs for wooden, ceramic, or matte plastic craft eggs is a fantastic idea. All of these tutorials (especially the Sharpie, paint pen, and bedazzling methods) work perfectly on craft eggs, and you get to keep your beautiful creations for years to come!

Vote above, then sound off in the comments! How are you handling the great egg inflation of 2026? Are you switching to plastic, scaling back, or buying the real deal no matter the cost? Tell us your strategy!