Vintage Valentines Day Craft

2/11/09 - By Anna Fader
umbrella.jpg The other day we wrote about sharing Valentines Day with your children with a Valentines Day living room picnic dinner. In this post we're sharing an idea that lets you turn your children into the sweetest Valentine I can imagine receiving. It's a super easy project you can do in minutes using adorable vintage Valentine images and your even more adorable little sweetheart. Check it out.

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Nothing is a sweeter Valentine than your delicious baby, toddler, or child - this craft activity will turn them into a sweet Valentine for your spouse or even for yourself. Good quality jpgs of vintage Valentines are just a google image search away—or check out the NYPL's online gallery of Vintage Valentine art. Then all you need is iron-on printer paper and a onesie, camisole or T-shirt. Add one baby...and you've got the sweetest little Valentine to melt anyone's heart. You can make Valentine T-Shirts with your older kids...You can turn yourself into a Valentine too. ;)

Note: Iron-on printer paper and a laser printer are the secret to impressing people with how clever you are for any occasion. Print any image onto a T-Shirt, tote or anything and you're an instant (literally) creative genius. This is great for impressive, but inexpensive children's party favors too.

About the Author

Anna Fader

Founder of Mommy Poppins

A fourth-generation Brooklynite, Anna started Mommy Poppins in 2007 to help families find the best things to do with kids in NYC, with a particular emphasis on sharing activities that are free, affordable, and enriching. The site, used by millions of families, has grown to become the ultimate resource for parents in the major US cities, plus travel guides for 100s of destinations.

Anna is a believer in the magic of summer camps, traveling with kids, and that you can raise kids on a budget and still have a rich life full of amazing memories. Anna's first Mommy Poppins book, The Young Traveler's Journal and Activity Book, published in 2025 and co-written with her daughter, Amelia Eigerman, brings that ethos to life, in addition to this website.