Perfect Marbled Easter Eggs

Perfect Marbled Easter Eggs

60-90 minutes
Ages 3-12
9
steps may need help

About This Project

Looking for the perfect way to make beautiful hard-boiled Easter eggs! This technique is simple, doesn't require an expensive kit, and consistently gives gorgeous results.

easter egg Easter egg Dye Marbling Contains Food Dye Contains Allergens

Steps

Cook your eggs

If you haven't already hard-boiled your eggs, make them now and let them cool. Our favorite, fool-proof 5-5-5 egg recipe uses a pressure cooker. Put the eggs in an egg trivet in the pressure cooker and set it to cook for 5 minutes. Let the steam naturally release for 5 minutes, then put in an ice bath for 5 more minutes.

Protect your work surface

Dying eggs is messy! Lay down some paper towels, old newspapers, or parchment paper to protect your table. Put on old clothes or a painting smock so you don't dye your favorite t-shirt. Set out wire cooling racks so your eggs will have somewhere to dry. Placing wet eggs back in a paper egg carton can cause them to stick.

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Prepare your colors

Fill each plastic cup with enough water to fully cover an egg. This is usually about 1/2-3/4 cup of water per color, but it will vary depending on the size of the cups you are using. Splash about 1 tsp of vinegar into each cup. The vinegar helps the colors stay vibrant. Then, add at least 5-8 drops of food coloring in each cup. For a softer, pastel color, use less coloring. For a bolder color, put more food coloring and plan to leave the egg in the dye longer.

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(Optional) Add a Message

Use a white crayon to draw a picture or write a message onto your egg. The waxy crayon will prevent the dye from sticking to the egg, leaving your message behind.

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Dye the base coat

Starting with ligther colors, dye each egg a base color by placing it in the plastic cup. The longer you leave it in the dye, the darker it will become.

Add oil and more food coloring

Once all of your eggs have been dyed a base color and are mostly dry, add about 1/2 tsp of oil to each of your dye cups. It doesn't have to be precise. Darker colors marble best, so add a few more drops of food coloring to each cup. Stir.

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Dye again

Dip your eggs into the oily dye again. The oil will prevent the dye from sticking to all of the egg, leaving awesome marble patterns. Set your eggs on the wire rack to dry between coats.

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Add multiple dye coats

You don't have to stop at just one color! Dip your eggs into the oily dye multiple times for beautiful, tie-dyed effects. This works best if you let the eggs dry between each step.

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Wipe off excess oil

The oil on the eggs will keep them from drying completely. Once the color is set, use a paper towel to wipe off extra oil.

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Display

Put your completed eggs in a beautiful bowl and enjoy them on Easter morning!

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