12 paper plate dinosaur crafts for kids

12 easy dinosaur paper plate crafts for kids with printable templates

Make 12 different paper plate dinosaur crafts with this set of printable templates including the diplodocus, triceratops, brachiosaurus and more.

Dinosaur crafts are super fun for kids of all ages. These creatures have an almost mythical quality to them, except they’re not mythical. They’re prehistoric monsters that actually roamed this planet, probably leaving giant footprints on the very dirt your house or apartment block is built on!

This makes them even more fascinating for kids.

There are 12 dinosaur species included in this set.

Get your full copy of the Ebook here.

12 easy dinosaur paper plate crafts for kids with printable templates

Each dinosaur includes a photographed finished example and a “fact file” so kids can learn about them while they craft.

Paper plate diplodicus dinosaur craft for kids

All of the favourite dinosaurs are included, like Diplodocus, Stegosaurus, Triceratops, Anklyosaurus, Velociraptor, Brachiosaurus, Pterodactyl and of course, the T-Rex. Plus more! (we couldn’t forget the Parasauralophus.)

Here are a a few fun Dinosaur facts:

  • Did you know the Stegosaurus grew up to 12m long (around the length of a bus) – but only had a brain the size of a lime?
  • The enormous Sauropod, the Diplodocus, likely used it’s whip-like tail to make a VERY loud noise, possibly in courtship to female dinosaurs or to scare away predators
  • The T-Rex had arms so short they couldn’t reach his mouth
  • The Velociraptor, popularised by Hollywood’s Jurassic Park Movie, was actually only the size of a large turkey. It also was likely to have been a warm-blooded animal with feathers. Mind you, it still would have been one ferocious carnivore!
Papeer plate dinosaur crafts for kids

Aren’t they incredible creatures?

Let’s make it!

How to make a paper plate dinosaur

You will need:

  • 23cm/9″ paper plates
  • Acrylic paint
  • Coloured card stock
  • Glue stick
  • Brushes and optional kitchen sponge for shape stamping
  • The printable dinosaur templates, available from our printables store and TPT store

Get one sample template for free

To get you started with your dinosaur crafting, we’re giving away the Diplodocus template for free by subscribing to our email list via the form below.

How to:

Cut your paper plate in half. Paint it and allow to dry.

Paper plate dinosaur craft step 1

Print the diplodocus template onto a sheet of coloured card stock in the same (or a similar) colour to your paper plate.

Paper plate dinosaur craft step 2

Cut the diplodocus shapes out and glue to the back of the paper plate.

Paper plate dinosaur craft step 3

Use a piece of kitchen sponge cut into a shape to decorate the dinosaur (I’ve used an irregular oval shape).

Paper plate dinosaur craft step 6

 Glue a paper eye into place and use a marker to draw a mouth.

Paper plate dinosaur craft step 7

You’re done!

Decorating the dinosaurs

You can vary the sponge shapes and techniques to create different effects on your dinosaurs. For this velociraptor I’ve cut a sponge into a long, skinny triangle to give it stripes.

Decorating a paper plate dinosaur

For the paper plate pterodactyl (or pterodactylus, as it’s more technically called), I’ve used a small sponge shape to paint streaks out from the centre of the plate to make it look more like wings.

For the “body” in the centre of the plate I’ve used a dabbing technique with the same piece of sponge to create a different texture to the rest of the plate.

Decorating a paper plate pterodactyl

This Utahraptor has had yarn glued to the plate to look like the feathers it was likely to have had.

Use a Q-tip/cotton bud to create a spotted pattern like I’ve done on this Parasauralophus.

Some dinosaurs had lots of very sharp teeth!

It’s easy to recreate the sharp teeth by folding a small mouth-sized piece of white paper in half and then cutting tiny zig zags along the fold line.

Making sharp dinosaur teeth

Unfold the small piece of paper to reveal a set of sharp dinosaur chompers.

Glue these to the back of the heads which have an open mouth for teeth, trimming to size if necessary. Younger kids may not have the fine motor skills to cut the fine zig zag shapes so this step is optional – or an adult could help them with it.

And that’s about all there is to it!

I’ve created some paper cut backgrounds for the dinosaurs to live in, which is an optional extra. There are a few tips on doing this in the Ebook if you’d like to make one too but your dinosaurs will look fabulous hanging on the wall as is!

You might also like:

Check out more of our printable animal crafts

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