Painting by Blowing with Pipette for Kids

Painting by Blowing with Pipette

Painting by Blowing with Pipette

Fun and Creative Pipette Blowing Art for Kids

Painting by blowing with a pipette is a playful and creative way for kids to explore art. This activity uses liquid paint and air instead of brushes. Children simply drop paint on paper and blow through a pipette to spread it. The result? Colorful and unpredictable patterns!

This method strengthens fine motor skills and builds lung capacity. Blowing through a pipette requires focus and control. It also helps children understand direction, movement, and color mixing in a hands-on way.

If your child enjoys playful art, try combining this with our simple shapes coloring pages, which also encourage creativity and coordination.

How to Set Up a Pipette Painting Activity

First, gather your materials. You’ll need liquid watercolors or watered-down paint, paper, a pipette (or straw), and a tray to contain the mess. Drop small amounts of paint onto the paper. Then, have the child blow through the pipette to move the paint around.

It’s a good idea to demonstrate first. Show how gently blowing can spread the paint in thin lines, while stronger puffs create splashes. Let kids experiment. This freedom boosts their confidence and imagination.

Tips for Making It Even More Exciting

You can add googly eyes or draw shapes around the paint splatters. This turns the artwork into silly creatures or landscapes. Try using different paper colors, or blowing multiple colors together to explore blending.

To tie this into early learning, ask kids to describe what they see. Are the colors mixing? Which direction did the paint go? These questions help build vocabulary and observation skills.

Looking for another unique technique? Explore our fine motor skills activities for kids for more hands-on learning ideas.

We paint the window by blowing with a pipette.

Preparation Steps:

Necessary materials:
Cardboard
Stretch film
Scissors
Paint

Let’s start the game:

Cut cardboard with scissors shaped window first.

Then cover with cling film around.

Then pour over paint.

Finally blowing with pipette.

What would the wind look like if we could actually see it blowing against our windows.

Would it splatter everywhere or just look like a blob? Would it be all different colors or just one?

Painting by Blowing with Pipette for kids

Painting by Blowing with Pipette for kids

Painting by Blowing

Painting by Blowing

Painting with Pipette

Kids are Painting with Pipette