Fall-Themed Crafts for Kids Using Leaves and Nature!

Autumn is one of the most beautiful and inspiring seasons of the year—especially for kids. With leaves crunching underfoot, acorns dotting the ground, and trees turning brilliant shades of orange and red, nature becomes the perfect craft supply.

Whether you’re looking for a fun weekend project, a school activity, or just a way to enjoy the season with your child, these fall crafts using leaves and natural materials are simple, affordable, and full of autumn magic.

Here are some of our favorite fall nature crafts for kids—no fancy materials required!

1. Leaf Rubbing Art

What you need:

  • Real leaves (fresh or dried)
  • Crayons or colored pencils
  • White paper

How to do it:
Place a leaf under the paper and gently rub over it with the side of a crayon. Watch the shape and veins of the leaf magically appear! Try using different leaves and colors to make a whole collage.

Why kids love it: It’s like making nature “appear” through the paper!

2. DIY Leaf Crowns

What you need:

  • Leaves in various sizes and colors
  • A strip of construction paper or cardstock
  • Glue or tape

How to do it:
Measure the paper strip to fit your child’s head. Let them glue or tape the leaves all around the band to create a festive fall crown.

Great for: Pretend play, nature walks, and mini woodland royalty.

3. Nature Collage

What you need:

  • Leaves, twigs, pinecones, acorns, bark, etc.
  • Cardboard or paper as a base
  • White glue

How to do it:
Head outside for a nature scavenger hunt. Then, arrange your collected items into a pattern, picture, or abstract design. Glue them down and let dry.

Learning tip: Talk about textures and patterns as kids build their masterpiece.

4. Acorn Animals

What you need:

  • Acorns, small sticks, leaves
  • Googly eyes (optional)
  • Glue

How to do it:
Use acorns as little animal bodies—add stick legs, leaf ears, and googly eyes to create squirrels, owls, or bugs. Let your imagination go wild!

Safety tip: Hot glue works best, but adult supervision is needed.

5. Leaf People

What you need:

  • Leaves in fun shapes
  • Paper
  • Glue
  • Markers or googly eyes

How to do it:
Glue leaves to paper as bodies, heads, or wings, then draw arms, legs, and faces to create silly or spooky leaf people.

Fun idea: Name them and create a “Leaf Family” or fall-themed storybook.

6. Painted Leaf Prints

What you need:

  • Leaves
  • Washable paint
  • Paper or fabric (like canvas or tote bags)

How to do it:
Paint one side of the leaf, press it paint-side-down onto paper, and gently lift. You’ll get a beautiful print of the leaf’s shape and texture.

Try this: Use fall colors like red, gold, and brown for a seasonal effect.

7. Pinecone Creatures

What you need:

  • Pinecones
  • Felt, googly eyes, pipe cleaners
  • Glue

How to do it:
Turn pinecones into animals like owls, foxes, or hedgehogs. Add felt ears and faces, and let kids design their own forest friends.

Great for: Imaginative play and homemade fall decorations.

8. Nature Mandalas

What you need:

  • Leaves, petals, seeds, rocks, twigs
  • Flat surface or paper base

How to do it:
Arrange natural objects into circular, repeating patterns (mandalas). This is a calming and creative activity that teaches symmetry and balance.

Mindful moment: Encourage quiet focus and outdoor reflection while making them.

9. Leaf Lanterns

What you need:

  • Mason jars or clean glass jars
  • Pressed leaves
  • Mod Podge or white glue
  • Battery-operated tea lights

How to do it:
Glue leaves to the outside of the jar using Mod Podge. Once dry, pop in a tea light for a soft autumn glow.

Perfect for: Cozy windowsills or evening storytime ambiance.

10. Fall-Themed Nature Mobile

What you need:

  • A stick or small branch
  • Yarn or string
  • Leaves, pinecones, acorns, feathers

How to do it:
Tie nature items to string and hang them from the branch to create a mobile. Hang it in a window or on a porch for a beautiful autumn display.

Extra charm: Watch it sway in the breeze or spin indoors!

Final Thoughts

Crafting with nature is one of the simplest ways to spark your child’s creativity and deepen their appreciation for the world around them. Best of all, it gets everyone outside collecting materials, noticing colors, and tuning in to the beauty of the season.

So grab a basket, head outdoors, and let the leaves inspire your next family art session. Fall doesn’t last forever—but the memories you make together will.

DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory Bottle

DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory BottleI love Autumn, it has to be my favorite season of the year!

After creating a Summer-themed ocean wave bottle, I felt inspired to create a sensory bottle for each season and I immediately thought of swirling multi-hued Autumn leaves!  Part of the fun in raising Zoey is making things that teach and fascinate her. And, if I’m being completely honest, I find sensory bottles fascinating too, so let’s make one!

DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory Bottle

SUPPLIES
  • 16 ounce clear, plastic bottle
  • 6 ounces of hot water
  • Clear glue
  • Slender whisk
  • Glycerin
  • Leaf-shaped glitter
  • Regular glitter (optional)
  • More hot water
  • Glue for the lid

DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory Bottle DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory BottleDIY Autumn Leaves Sensory Bottle

INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Pour the 6 ounces of hot (as hot as your tap will run) water into your bottle.
  2. Add 2.5 to 3 ounces (or more) of glue to the hot water in your bottle. The more glue you add, the slower your leaves will swirl and fall.
  3. Whisk the glue in the hot water until well incorporated. You can also replace the lid of the bottle and shake, however this created a lot of foam bubbles for me. They will go away, but it will slow down your progress.
  4. Measure 1 to 2 tablespoons of Glycerin and whisk or replace the lid and shake again.
  5. Add your glitter. I used several different hues of leaf shaped glitter and a few pinches of regular gold glitter.
  6. Pour more hot water into the bottle. Stop before reaching the top, replace the lid and turn the bottle over several times to check how everything moves. At this point you can add more glitter, more glue to make it fall slower, and/or more glycerin to smooth everything out.
  7. After you’re satisfied with the flow of the bottle’s contents, remove the lid again and fill the bottle all the way to the top with the hot water.
  8. If your child is older and you worry about him/her undoing the lid, you can coat the inside of the lid with glue, then screw it back onto the bottle. This will secure the lid and make it harder for little ones to unscrew the lid and create a leak or spill the bottle’s contents.

DIY Autumn Leaves Sensory Bottle