Guide to Hand painted Easter Eggs

I’ve always believed that ordinary things can be made into objects to be treasured. And these hand painted Easter eggs which I made during Lockdown went viral across instagram.

a decorative bowl of hand painted easter eggs by designer Isla Simpson
easter eggs in a wallpapered kitchen decorated for Spring

Spring 2025 Update: I recently had the pleasure of contributing to Rebecca Udall’s Easter blog post alongside a group of inspiring creatives, sharing tips on seasonal styling, floral arrangements, hand-painted decor, and creating a welcoming ambience for guests. From layered linens to spring blooms and hand-painted eggs, the piece is full of thoughtful ways to elevate your table this Easter. You can read it here.

When I hand painted these, eggs were like hens teeth, we’d all gone baking mad and supermarkets were in ration overdrive. Rumours went down in my street that if you asked the chap in the corner shop, he had eggs under the counter for his ‘very best’ customers. I hesitated over using my Cotswold Legg bar pastel coloured eggs ( my absolute favourite) for fear of bragging. But I rationalised there could be no better time for zero waste and some decoration on those shells.

A step by step guide to hand painting eggs for Easter.

You will need; an unpicker, eggs, paints, paintbrush, pencil, rubber, possibly some paper too.

  1. Wash & dry your egg (carefully) if you are worried about germs. I'm a country girl, this step doesn’t bother me.

  2. Bore out a hole top and bottom. I find the best tool for this is an unpicker. GO SLOWLY. Lightly Tap a first chip out of the shell with the sharp end and then bore gently with the unpicker so as not to crack the shell. You don’t want a huge hole ( just enough to evacuate).

  3. Blow the egg out into a bowl, make a cake, omelette or scrambled eggs. Can you tell I have a horror of food waste?

  4. Wash, dry and mark out your motif with a pencil.

    *If you need help, trace a motif onto tracing paper/baking parchment, pencil the reverse and trace on to the egg. Tracing over a round surface is not the easiest, but you will have enough to work with.

  5. Paint your motif with a base colour of paint, I used white here.

    * I like acrylics, but always encourage you to look around the house before you rush out to buy anything you won’t use again. There’s always a paint sample or Sharpie lying around. Or in my case, some gold paint I’d had for decades.

  6. Give it a contrast colour to outline, or emphasise, I used navy paint here.

  7. Allow to dry and arrange in a pretty bowl.

  8. Or thread some ribbon through, tie a knot and hang on your Easter Tree.

  9. Save your egg boxes to store away for next year.

Hand decorated easter eggs by Isla Simpson in a decorative bowl
Close up detail of hand painted easter egg decorations by Isla Simpson
A Cotwsold Legbar egg painted with a gold bow by designer Isla Simpson
A detailed close up of a hand painted egg with initials by Isla Simpson
hand painted bow easter egg decoration on blue and white plate