Black Friday Upcycling Projects: Coloring Pages for Kids

Black Friday Upcycling Project Coloring for Sustainable Shopping
Black Friday is the day cardboard boxes multiply in your hallway. Bags, tags, tissue paper, and that weird amount of plastic wrap that wraps the thing you already unwrapped. By Saturday morning, the recycling bin is full and the kids are asking what's for lunch. We don't lecture anyone about shopping, we all do it, but turning the pile into something useful beats watching it sit there.
Teaching Kids About Conscious Shopping
The 4-year-old doesn't know what conscious consumerism means, but they can learn "we use what we have before we buy more". That's the whole lesson. Start with what's in front of them: the cardboard from the package, the tissue paper from the gift bag, the wrapping paper that didn't quite tear cleanly. Ask them what it could become instead of throwing it away.
We've watched parents turn Black Friday into a teaching moment by setting aside the packaging before tossing it. One parent told us she now keeps a "future craft box" by the recycling bin so her kids can pick what they want to save. It's not a formal activity, it's just habit. The kid sees the box as potential instead of trash.
If you need a structured way to open the conversation, print a coloring page about recycling or reusing. Color it together while you sort the pile. Preschoolers respond better to a picture of a cardboard robot than a talk about landfills.
Sustainable Black Friday Crafts for Children
Cardboard is the winner here. Boxes from deliveries can become forts, masks, picture frames, or garage parking for their toy cars. Cut shapes, glue them together, let them color the whole thing with markers or crayons. If the fort lasts a week before it falls apart, it's still a week you didn't spend searching for something new to do.
Tissue paper and gift bags work for collage projects. Tear them into strips, glue them onto simple animal coloring pages, and you've got a textured giraffe or a layered butterfly. The 3-year-old doesn't care if the tissue paper was from Grandma's present or a store. They care that they're allowed to rip it up and stick it on something.
Plastic packaging can become stamps. Cut a shape into the end of a plastic container, dip it in paint, press it onto paper. We're not saying every piece of packaging has a second life, but the stuff that's headed for the bin anyway might buy you twenty minutes of stamping.
Bubble wrap is noise therapy. Let them pop it while you're putting away the groceries, then cut it into shapes for printing. Dip the bubbles in paint, press onto paper, instant textured art. If they want to color the print after it dries, hand them a coloring page and let them trace the shapes.
Upcycling Projects After Black Friday
Post-sale fatigue is real. You're tired, the kids are wired, and the house is full of stuff you now have to find places for. Upcycling projects work because they use the mess that's already there.
Egg-carton caterpillars are the classic for a reason. Cut the carton into sections, let the kids paint each one a different color, string them together with yarn. Takes about fifteen minutes and uses something that was headed for the bin. If they want to add eyes or pipe-cleaner antennae, great. If they want to leave it as a rainbow blob, also fine.
Milk-jug bird feeders are a weekend project. Cut a window in the side of a clean jug, punch holes for a dowel perch, fill with birdseed, hang it outside. The 6-year-old gets to watch birds land on something they made. The environmental lesson happens quietly while they're counting sparrows.
Shoe-box dioramas work if you've got a kid who's into a specific thing this week. The inside of the box becomes a dinosaur habitat, a fairy garden, or a parking garage depending on what they're obsessed with. Add construction vehicles or dragons, color the background on paper, glue it inside. The box gives them a contained world they can carry around.
Reduce Reuse Recycle Coloring Pages
Coloring pages can anchor the whole activity. Print a page about recycling bins, composting, or reusing materials. The kid colors while you talk about which bin the cardboard goes in or why we wash jars before recycling them. It's not exciting but it's memorable because they're holding the picture.
We've had teachers tell us they print reduce-reuse-recycle pages for the week after big shopping holidays. The kids color the bins in different colors, then practice sorting scraps of real paper into matching piles. The coloring page becomes the reference guide for the sorting game.
If your child asks for something specific ("a robot made of boxes" or "a turtle eating plastic"), our generator can make that page in about two minutes. Type or say what you want, print it, and they've got a custom page that matches what they're thinking about. We built it because the generic recycling clip-art doesn't land the same way as a page about the exact thing they care about.
Eco Friendly Black Friday Activities
The goal isn't zero waste, that's not realistic with kids, it's making one more thing before throwing the packaging away. An hour of crafting with cardboard and tape means an hour they're not asking for screen time.
Set up a craft station on Friday or Saturday while the packages are still coming in. Put out scissors (supervised for the younger ones), glue sticks, markers, tape, and a pile of the packaging you've set aside. Let them build whatever they want. The 5-year-old will make a spaceship. The 3-year-old will tape things together with no plan and call it a castle. Both are fine.
If the mess gets overwhelming, rotate the materials. Monday is cardboard day, Tuesday is tissue-paper collage day, Wednesday is bubble-wrap printing. Breaking it into smaller projects keeps it manageable and gives you something to point to when they say they're bored.
Post Black Friday Craft Ideas for Families
The weekend after Black Friday is long. Everyone's tired from shopping or traveling or both. Upcycling projects fill the gap because the materials are already in the house and the activity is concrete.
Family collage afternoons work well. Spread out all the leftover wrapping paper, tissue, ribbon, and tags. Give each person a piece of cardboard or paper as a base. Glue whatever you want onto it. No rules, no theme, just covering the page. The 4-year-old's collage will look like chaos. The adult's might too. The point is sitting together making something instead of staring at a screen.
Some parents frame the collages or hang them for a week, then toss them when the next project comes along. The kid learns that making things is the activity, not keeping every piece of art forever. (Yes, we know that's easier said than done when they ask where the cardboard spaceship went.)
How to Teach Kids About Black Friday Waste
You don't have to make it heavy. Show them the pile of packaging, ask them what's worth keeping, let them decide what becomes a project. If they want to toss most of it, fine. If they want to save the box that held the new toy, also fine. The lesson is in the pause, not in turning into a lecture about consumerism.
We keep two free pages available every day with no signup, no card. Print a stack before the shopping starts, keep them in the craft station, and pull one out when the upcycling project needs a plan or a background. The coloring page becomes the map for the cardboard fort or the backdrop for the diorama. You're using what's already in the house plus a printed page. That's the whole model.
Rachel Thompson
Mindfulness Coach
Rachel specialises in using creative activities for stress relief and meditation practices.



