If you have kids, you probably have crayons.

At the start of every school year we start off with a new box of crayons. Then there are the crayons the kids get at restaurants and the crayons that come with art kits…

Pretty soon, if you’re like us, you have a ton of crayons taking up space.

Just what do you do with all those old crayons?

We had fun using our old crayons to make colorful Crayon Drip Pumpkins.

It’s one of our favorite no carve pumpkin decorating ideas. In fact, we do it every year.

Crayon Drip Pumpkins

Materials Needed:

Old crayons (I have found Crayola and Rose Art ones melt best.)

Hair dryer or Heat Gun

Pumpkins

Look through your old crayons and find the colors you want to use for decorating your pumpkin.

The paper will need to be peeled from each crayon before you can use them. This is a great way for kids to work on fine motor skills!

If you have a small pumpkin you may want to break crayons into smaller pieces, as you won’t need as much wax to drip down the pumpkin’s sides. For larger pumpkins keep the crayons whole.

Then, arrange the crayons on top of the pumpkin, as shown below.

Our pumpkins all seemed to have a nice flat area on top where the crayons rested without rolling.

If you have a tall, narrow pumpkin, or your crayons don’t want to stay in place, you could use a bit of craft glue to glue them to the pumpkin. If you do this, you will need to wait for the glue to dry before you proceed to the next step.

Next, you will use your hair dryer, or a heat gun, to melt the crayons. (Heat guns can get very hot, do not let a child handle one!)

We found that it worked best to do one section of the pumpkin at a time, concentrating the hot air on about 1/3 of the crayons, and then moving to the next group once those were melted. The kids loved watching as the colors melted and swirled together!

If your pumpkin has a deep indention where the stem is you will need to angle your hair dryer so it blows the melted wax down the pumpkin’s sides instead of letting all the wax pool around the stem.

Want your wax to stick to the pumpkin as it curves towards the bottom, instead of it hanging straight down?

Use the hair dryer and angle it at the bottom of the pumpkin’s sides while tilting the pumpkin a bit.

The results are colorful, unique pumpkins to display!

Not happy how it turned out? You can always add more crayons to the top of the pumpkin to add more color.

We did this pumpkin with two different sets of crayons, adding more greens the second time around.

Tips for this No-Carve Pumpkin Idea:

Metallic crayons (like silver) give the pumpkin a really neat look.

Using only red and black crayons gives the pumpkin a very Halloween feel, looking a lot like blood dripping down the sides.

You will want more than one pumpkin to do this with, as it can become very addicting!

Make sure you place your pumpkin on some old newspapers, drop cloth, or something else you don’t mind getting a bit of wax on because the wax will drip off the pumpkin a bit.

If placing your pumpkin outside, try to put it in a spot that isn’t going to have sunlight the whole day. (We discovered the wax will melt a bit if you leave it too long in the sun!

Finally, there’s a fun and creative use for those old crayons this fall — crayon drip pumpkins!

I guarantee this no-carve pumpkin idea will be a hit.

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Other pumpkin activities you might want to check out: