Author Ranger Rick Team
Topic Indoor Activities
Colorful thumbprint insects including a ladybug, dragonfly, and beetle made from fingerprint art

Press your thumb onto an ink pad, stamp it on paper, and turn the print into a ladybug, dragonfly, bee, caterpillar, spider, or any creepy-crawly you can imagine. This craft takes about 10 minutes, needs almost no supplies, and is perfect for all ages.

Materials

Supplies:

  • Non-toxic, washable ink pad (any color, or multiple colors)
  • Paper
  • Pen or fine-tip marker

That’s it. Three supplies.

Tools:

  • Damp cloth or wet wipes (for cleaning thumbs between colors)

No ink pad? Dip your thumb in washable paint spread thin on a paper plate. Works the same way.

Steps

  1. Make thumbprints. Press your thumb onto the ink pad, then firmly onto the paper. Lift straight up for a clean print. Make a bunch, spaced out so you have room to draw around each one.
  2. Let the ink dry. Wait a minute or two so the pen doesn’t smear the prints.
  3. Turn them into bugs. Use a pen or fine-tip marker to add legs, wings, antennae, eyes, and other features to each thumbprint:

➡️Ladybug: Add a line down the center, dots on each side, two antennae, and six legs.

➡️ Bee: Add stripes, two wings, antennae, and a stinger.

➡️Caterpillar: Line up 4-5 thumbprints in a row. Add legs to each, antennae on the first one, and a smiley face.

➡️ Spider: Add eight legs radiating outward from the print.

➡️ Butterfly: Use two prints side by side for wings, add a thin body between them, and draw antennae.

➡️ Ant: Three prints in a row (head, thorax, abdomen), add six legs and antennae.

Grownup help needed: None. Use washable, non-toxic ink only.

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