Colour Activities at Home

Most of the activities on this site come from classroom planning, but they translate well to home — usually with simpler tools and a more relaxed pace. This page picks out the ideas that work best in a kitchen, a living-room floor, or a back garden, with no laminator and no classroom budget.

Family Weekend School holidays Rainy day

Last reviewed on 30 April 2026.

What you'll need

  • Food colouring (gel goes further than liquid).
  • White vinegar.
  • A few clear cups or jars.
  • Kitchen roll.
  • A baking tray or large plate.
  • Coloured pencils or felt-tip pens.

A weekend colour rhythm

A short routine helps. You don't need a five-day plan; a Saturday-Sunday rhythm covers most of the same ground without the work of a classroom week. Pick one focus colour and let it run across the weekend.

Saturday morning

Hunt for the colour around the house. Children take photos or place small objects on a plate. Talk about which version of the colour each object is — pale, bright, dark.

Saturday afternoon

A short messy play session at the kitchen table. Dyed rice in a tray, or paint mixing on a paper plate. The messy play recipes all scale down for one or two children.

Sunday morning

A walk outside with a colour-spotting target. Spot ten objects in the focus colour. The nature colour hunt checklist gives a ready-made structure.

Sunday afternoon

A quiet wind-down task — a colour-by-maths sheet, a mindfulness colouring page, or a simple drawing of "what we found this weekend". Stick the result on the fridge.

Kitchen-friendly messy play

Three recipes from the messy play page work especially well at home because the cleanup is contained and the materials live in most kitchens already.

  • Dyed rice. Two cups of rice, a teaspoon of vinegar, a few drops of food colouring in a sealed bag. Shake. Tip onto a baking tray to dry overnight.
  • Coloured spaghetti. Cook spaghetti, drain, toss with a teaspoon of oil and food colouring. Cool on a plate, then offer with kitchen scissors and tongs.
  • Walking water. Six cups, water, food colouring, kitchen-roll bridges. Watch primary colours mix into secondaries.

All three keep small children busy at the kitchen table while a parent cooks, replies to email, or reads in the same room.

Reuse rule

Dyed rice and chickpeas keep for weeks in a sealed tub. Don't make a fresh batch every weekend — refresh an old batch with another drop of food colouring and a splash of vinegar, give it a shake, and it's ready again.

Quiet activities for tired days

Not every weekend has the energy for messy play. On low-key days, the printables library is the easiest way in. The sheets that work best at home are the ones that don't need adult guidance:

Print on whatever paper you have. The activities don't need 120gsm card or laminating to do their job at home.

Things you don't need

Classroom resources can make home learning feel heavy. It usually isn't. You don't need:

  • A tuff tray — a baking tray, large plate, or builders' tray works fine.
  • A laminator — print, use, recycle. Re-print if you want it again.
  • Colour-coded resource boxes — a single shoebox of "colour bits" is plenty.
  • A formal lesson plan — one focus and one question per activity is enough.
  • An hour — fifteen minutes of a good colour activity beats an hour of a stretched one.

One-question prompts

If you're stuck for what to say, pick one:

  • "What's another thing this colour reminds you of?"
  • "What happens if we put these two together?"
  • "Which is darker and which is lighter?"
  • "Can we find this colour in three different rooms?"
  • "What colour would the opposite feel like?"

Linking home and school

If a child's setting runs a colour-of-the-week (you'll often see it in newsletters or on the classroom door), the easiest thing you can do at home is mirror it. Wear something in the focus colour, eat something in it, find a book with it on the cover. Children value the connection more than the activity itself.

Where a child has additional needs, share what works at home with the setting. Adjustments around messy play, sensory tolerance, or colour vision often translate. The inclusive colour learning page has a short checklist that's quick to share with a teacher or childminder.

Where to go next

Most families find their way around the site by topic. For sensory ideas, head to messy play. For weekend science, the colour STEM page covers walking water, chromatography, and the Skittles rainbow. For the language behind colour mixing, the colour theory guide is the one to read once, then keep open in a tab the next time someone asks "what colour does red and blue make?".