Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (2024)

by Debbie Chapman

Jump to Instructions

This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy.

Bubble painting is so much fun! Both kids and adults will have a blast experimenting with this unique way of painting without a paintbrush. Turn your bubble art into monsters, flowers, or leave it as abstract art – it’s so much fun to experiment with this technique!

To make these colourful paintings, simply combine dish soap, water, and paint. Then use a straw to blow bubbles in the mixture and press the paper onto the bubbles. It’s such an easy process, but it creates beautiful, unique patterns every time!

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (1)

This post contains affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something we may earn a small commission which helps us run this website.

Print

How to Bubble Paint

Use dish soap and paint to create unique, colorful bubble art. It's such a cool art project and kids craft!

Author: Debbie Chapman

Materials:

Equipment:

Check Out The Video Tutorial:

Instructions:

Step 1: Find what you need

  • Gather your supplies and materials.

    (The glue, Sharpie, and googly eyes are optional - see our bubble aliens picture below to see how they were used!)

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (2)

Step 2: Mix the coloured bubble mixture

  • Pour 1 Tablespoon of water into a small bowl.

    (You can also make bubble paint in larger bowls, or even on a baking tray. Increase the amount of water/paint/soap accordingly.)

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (3)

  • Add an equal amount of dish soap into the water (1 Tablespoon).

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (4)

  • Pour in another equal amount (1 Tablespoon) of paint into the bowl, creating an equal 1:1:1 ratio of water, dish soap, and paint.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (5)

  • Stir the mixture well, with a popsicle stick or spoon, until fully combined.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (6)

Step 3: Add bubble impressions to the paper

  • Put a drinking straw into the mixture. Keep your straw towards the bottom of the bowl and blow gently into the straw to create bubbles. Keep blowing until the bubbles overflow the top of the bowl.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (7)

  • Remove the straw and gently press the cardstock onto the coloured bubbles. The bubbles disappear almost instantly!

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (8)

  • Flip the cardstock back over to see the coloured bubble impression on the paper.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (9)

  • Blow more bubbles and press a different part of the paper into the bubbles.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (10)

  • Repeat as many times as you'd like with the same colour.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (11)

Step 4: Add different colours of bubbles

  • Choose a second colour of paint to mix with dish soap and water.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (12)

  • Blow bubbles, big enough so they reach over the top rim of the bowl.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (13)

  • Press the paper into the bubbles. Try to cover new areas of the paper, but it's okay for the colours to mix a bit.

    Repeat as many times as you'd like.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (14)

  • Repeat again with a third colour. You could even add a fourth colour!

    Allow to dry about 5 minutes.

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (15)

  • Your bubble painting is complete!

    Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (16)

Helpful Tips:

  1. Safety Warning: Use non-toxic paint to create your coloured bubble mixture. Make sure that kids know they’re supposed to blow into the bubble mixture, not drink it. To help with this you can poke a hole near the top of the straw with a pushpin. This allows you to blow into the straw, but makes it more difficult to drink from.
  2. The bubble mixture will look darker than the colours appear on the paper. Add more paint to the mixture if the colours don’t come out bright enough.
  3. Add more soap to the mixture, a little bit at a time, if large bubbles aren’t forming when you blow through the straw.

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (17)

Is bubble painting messy?

As long as you make your artwork on a baking tray or plastic tablecloth, it’s easy to contain the mess from bubble painting. Since you’re not blowing bubbles into the air, the only mess is from the tiny splatters around the bowl when the paper pops the bubbles.

If your kids are younger they can wear painting smocks, but older kids should be okay. Plus, since the bubble mixture is 1/3 soap, it’s very easy to wipe up using a bit of water on a paper towel or cloth!

What paper should I use for my bubble painting?

We used 65 lb white cardstock to make our bubble art. You need to use a paper thick enough that the bubbles won’t soak through, and that won’t curl up as it dries. (Regular printer paper is not thick enough.)

You can also use watercolour paper to make bubble paintings. The paint colours actually showed up a lot better when we tested it on watercolour paper, but it’s a lot more expensive than cardstock. You could also use a canvas from the dollar store if you’d like to give your bubble painting as a gift!

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (18)

What paint works best to make bubble art?

Be sure to use non-toxic paint, such as washable tempera paint when you’re making this craft with kids. We used acrylic paint in the paintings you see in the photos because our kids are old enough to understand not to suck through the straw.

We found that cool toned colours (like blue and green) showed up better on the paper than warm colours (like yellow).If you want to make bubble art on fabric, like a t-shirt or a canvas bag, try adding fabric dye to the mixture, instead of paint.

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (19)

What can I do with my bubble painting?

Leave the bubble art work as is, or add fun details with markers or paint. Try turning the bubble prints into flowers, balloons, cotton candy, or even aliens! We found it really fun to make a bubble painting and then imagine what kinds of things we saw in the painting, almost like gazing at the clouds.

You can also add painter’s tape to your paper before making the bubble art. Remove the tape after the paint has dried to create some fun tape resist art!

The colourful bubbles make a great backdrop for a lot of other things. Fold your bubble painting to make a homemade greeting card, or cut the art into gift tags or bookmarks.

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (20)

Experiment with colour and make a unique bubble painting! It’s such a fun and magical process to watch the bubbles appear on the paper, and it’s a great art project for kids.

Here’s even more fun ideas:

Q-Tip Flower Painting

Easy Tree Painting

Bouncing Bubbles

Paper Roll Fireworks Painting

Our bookLow-Mess Crafts for Kids is loaded with 72 fun and simple craft ideas for kids! The projects are fun, easy and most importantly low-mess, so the clean up is simple!

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (25)

Where to buy:

You can purchase Low-Mess Crafts for Kids from Amazon, or wherever books are sold:

Amazon |Barnes and Noble | Books-A-Million | Indiebound | Amazon Canada

Previous PostCrepe Paper Flowers
Next Post Tape Resist Art

More from One Little Project

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (26)

About Debbie Chapman, the Author of this Post

I'm Debbie Chapman, founder of One Little Project and author of the book Low-Mess Crafts for Kids. I love creating fun and easy crafts and cooking up delicious recipes for my husband and 3 kids.

More by Debbie Chapman

Filed Under: Just for Kids, Kids Crafts and Activities, Preschooler and Toddler ActivitiesTagged With: acrylic paint, art for kids, Bubbles, cardstock, googly eyes, painter's tape, Sharpie, summer crafts, tape resist

Love to cook, bake, craft, create?

Join the e-club for the latest

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (27)

Get the Book

Low-Mess Crafts for Kids

72 Projects to Create Your Own Magical Worlds

Get your copy

Reader Interactions

Let us know what you think:

Bubble Painting | Easy Bubble Art for Kids (2024)

FAQs

How to do bubble straw art? ›

Add some dish soap to each cup of water and then head outside, with all of the other necessary supplies. Working with one cup (and color) at a time, place a straw into the cup and begin blowing bubbles, until the bubbles emerge from the rim of the cup. Quickly place a few drops of food coloring onto the bubbles.

What is the method of bubble painting? ›

How To Bubble Paint: Fill the cup half way with water and add a bit of dish soap. Then add a few drops of food coloring. The more you add, the brighter the prints will be.

How to paint bubbles with a cup? ›

Step 1 – Add an equal amount of tempera paint and bubble solution to a cup. Step 2 – Mix the paint and bubble solution together. Step 3 – Put the straw in the bubble-paint mix and blow until bubbles are overflowing the cup. Step 4 – Remove the straw and slowly lower the paper onto the bubble-filled cup.

How to make purple bubbles? ›

Mix 6 cups of water, 1 cup of unscented dish soap, and 1 Tbsp of glycerin. Stir the solution to combine. Pour the bubble solution into eight jars or bottles, one for each color of the rainbow. Add a drop of food coloring into each jar to have red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple colors.

How do you make a bubble blowing pipe? ›

Directions for Bubble Pipe
  1. Take the small piece of writing paper, roll it around one side of the straw, and tape it.
  2. Take the small piece of aluminum foil, roll it around one side of the straw, and tape it.
  3. Take the small piece of parchment paper, roll it around one side of the straw, and tape it.
Mar 26, 2020

What is the best liquid for bubbles? ›

1 cup of dish soap (the brands Joy or Dawn work best) 1/3 cup of glycerin (substitutions: 1/3 cup of honey or 1/2 cup of corn syrup) 1 empty water bottle or pop bottle and a sock for bubble caterpillars. Bubble wands—anything that can hold soap film, like a slotted spatula.

Can you put food coloring in bubbles? ›

Standard food coloring or dyes have no effect; they simply run down the sides of the bubble, creating a drop of color on the bottom. Other dyes can stain bubbles, but when they pop they also stain clothes, dogs and eyes, as Kehoe discovered during one accident.

What kind of paint do you use for bubble painting? ›

NOTE: For more colorful bubbles, use liquid watercolors, tempera paint, or acrylic paint. Make sure you use washable paint colors! Tip: For mixing up different colors, try using a muffin pan!

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lakeisha Bayer VM

Last Updated:

Views: 5871

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lakeisha Bayer VM

Birthday: 1997-10-17

Address: Suite 835 34136 Adrian Mountains, Floydton, UT 81036

Phone: +3571527672278

Job: Manufacturing Agent

Hobby: Skimboarding, Photography, Roller skating, Knife making, Paintball, Embroidery, Gunsmithing

Introduction: My name is Lakeisha Bayer VM, I am a brainy, kind, enchanting, healthy, lovely, clean, witty person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.