How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter

Have you ever wondered how to make salt dough ornaments? You can make so many cool things but one of my favourites is crafting Easter decorations. I thought I’d share my foolproof guide. They’re so easy to make, and you can bring them out year after year.

DIY Easter Decorations

Creating DIY Easter decorations is great fun. Over the years I’ve made a DIY spring wreath using faux tulips. And created a sweet Easter bunny garland, complete with pom pom tails.

Not to mention the DIY Easter chocolate bark — studded with foam eggs and mini eggs — YUM.

But one of the simplest activities, by far, is making salt dough ornaments.

Salt dough can be moulded into all kinds of shapes — you can go freestyle or use cookie cutters. And, if it’s cooked well enough and painted, it seals the dough and will last for years and years.

Salt Dough Ornaments

You can make your salt dough ornaments as simple — or as complicated — as you like. Even the children can get involved! It’s such a fun craft and something that the whole family will enjoy. Here are some ideas to make with your salt dough.

Easter Egg Easter Decorations

Roll out the salt dough and use egg-shaped cookie cutters to create ornaments resembling Easter eggs. You can then decorate them with paint, markers, or even glitter to make them colourful and pretty.

They make fantastic Easter tree decorations.

Bunny Salt Dough Ornaments

Use a bunny-shaped cookie cutter or mould the dough into bunny shapes by hand. Add details like eyes, a nose, and whiskers before baking. Once baked and cooled, you can paint the bunnies in various colours and add a ribbon for hanging.

Chicks

Mould small balls of dough into chick shapes, or used a cookie cutter as I have done here, adding details like beaks and wings before baking. Once cooled, paint the chicks yellow and add eyes and feet using paint or markers.

DIY Easter decorations and salt dough ornaments
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

Crosses

Roll out the dough and cut it into cross shapes using a knife or cookie cutter. After baking and cooling, paint the crosses in pastel colours and add decorative touches like patterns or flowers.

You could even use dried flowers to decorate your Easter decorations.

Flowers

Create flower shapes by cutting the dough into circles and making indentations around the edges to resemble petals. Roll a little ball of dough, and press in the middle, for the flower’s center. Once baked, paint the flowers in vibrant colours and add details like stems and leaves.

Butterflies and Bee Salt Dough Ornaments

Mould the dough into butterfly and bee shapes, making sure to create distinct wings. After baking and cooling, paint your bees and butterflies in bright colours and add details like antennae and patterns on the wings.

Easter Baskets

Make little baskets out of your salt dough. Create the vessel first, then create a handle by twisting (or plaiting) strips of dough together. Once baked and cooled, paint the baskets brown then add details like handles and decorative patterns. You can even fill the baskets with tiny salt dough eggs or — even better — with foil wrapped mini eggs.

Easter Wreaths

I’ve created DIY flower wreaths before but you could also use salt dough to create a cool Easter wreath. Create a ring shape with the dough and decorate it with small Easter-themed shapes like eggs, bunnies, chicks, and flowers. After baking and cooling, paint the wreath in pastel colours and add a ribbon for hanging.

Top Tip

Don’t forget to poke a hole in each of your salt dough ornaments before baking so you can thread a ribbon through for hanging. Once your ornaments are decorated and dry, you can hang them on a branch or use them as Easter tree decorations, or give them as gifts to friends and family.

They can even be used as prizes for your Easter Egg Hunt.

How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter

Take one cup of plain flour, one cup of salt and as much water as you need to make a pastry like dough. Some recipes suggest a whole cup but I probably used three quarters.

Just use your discretion; if the mix starts to look too sticky, just add more flour.

How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter — these are the ingredients you'll need for the best salt dough recipe.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Mix your dry ingredients together.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Add water to your dry ingredients.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Mix your ingredients to form a smooth dough.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

Roll out your dough and start to cut out your shapes.

I have some little egg and chick cutters but you could use bunnies, flowers whatever takes your fancy!

If you’re going to hang your decorations, remember to make a hole in each one. I used the end of a drinking straw, to make mine.

Then lay then shapes on a baking sheet and pop in the oven on a low heat. I cook ours at 100 degrees for 1 hour then turn them over and cook for another hour.

After 2 hours, I turn the oven off but leave the salt dough shapes in there, so they carry on baking with the residual heat.

How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Roll out your dough.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Use a cookie cutter to create little Easter chicks.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Use a cookie cutter to create little Easter eggs.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter: Put your salt dough ornaments on to a baking tray.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

Decorating Your Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter

When your salt dough ornaments are totally hardened and cool, you can begin to paint the shapes. This is the fun part!

I use a mix of emulsion, acrylic and poster paints, topped off with some glitter glaze I had left over from decorating a little girl’s bedroom.

I leave some of the shapes in a plain colour and paint patterns on others to mix things up a little. Then leave them alone for a couple of hours and — when the paint has totally dried — I thread ribbon through the holes.

Use acrylic and poster paints to decorate your Salt Dough Ornaments.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
When you've painted your salt dough ornaments leave them to dry.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
When you've painted your salt dough ornaments leave them to dry.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
These DIY Easter decorations and salt dough ornaments are ready to hang!
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Create Easter tree decorations using this simple salt dough recipe.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Create Easter tree decorations using this simple salt dough recipe.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

I am so pleased with how these turned out! They make fantastic Easter tree decorations.

We bought this little wire tree, especially for the Christmas decorations the boys made at the nursery. I thought it would be a lovely thing to bring out, year after year — and a great way to display the things that they’d made — but having another use for it is brilliant.

Plus it makes Easter into more of an occasion. When the boys see the little tree — and the salt dough Easter decorations being brought out — they’ll know we’ve got four days of loveliness coming up!

Do you have any Easter traditions?

Caro Davies editor of The Listed Home
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Caro Davies is a former art-director turned writer and content-creator, and editor behind UK lifestyle blog The Listed Home. She writes about home-related topics, from interiors and DIY to food and craft. The Listed Home has been featured in various publications, including Ideal Home, Grazia, and Homes & Antiques magazines.

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41 thoughts on “How To Make Salt Dough Ornaments for Easter”

  1. Caro they are so lovely and your photos are beautiful. Do you know I have never made salt dough, but when the boys were little they had every colour in play doh imaginable xx

  2. I love that tree!! I would never think of making decorations for Easter. I totally failed this year and so next year is going to look like the Easter bunny has exploded all over the house! Ha! Thanks for hosting xx

  3. Oh my, such a lovely post! Your photography is lovely, and the decorations are gorgeous. :) Last time I made salt dough it was a little bubbly and not so great. I am hoping to make some more soon and hopefully things will be a bit better this time! Ray xx @ lukeosaurusandme.blogspot.co.uk #twinklytuesday

  4. I love the idea of an Easter tree and these decorations are just stunning, even just laying in the bowl! A I right in thinking I can spy a doggy pawprint on one of those eggs? #TwinklyTuesday

    • HA! Not a doggy pawprint Katie! A kitten pawprint!! That’s what happens when you leave rolled out pastry/salt-dough on the kitchen unattended for a couple of minutes!! ;) Good spot! ;) x

  5. Wow, they look fantastic! I wish I could be a bit more creative with my hands, I’m so rubbish at practical things, but I shall have to attempt these with A as I think he’d love making them! #sharewithme

    • I highly recommend it Michelle — just factor in the cooking time! 5 hours makes it quite a long, drawn out activity! ;) Nice to split it across 2 days — making the dough and cutting the shapes on one day — painting the shapes on the next!

  6. I love this! Will definitely try this and do something that is not season dependent for my son! I am so excited! #sharewithme

  7. Salt dough is so much fun isn’t it! And how adorable are your decorations you guys! Love it. We’ve never had an Easter tree but I think Annabelle will be old enough next year to help decorate it rather than destroy! lol x

    • I think it’s a lovely, fun, thing to do with kids! :) And I’m really happy about having an Easter Tree tradition too! It makes me smile to think that the boys will get all excited when they see the little box of salt dough decorations being brought down from the attic! :)

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