Happy Easter weekend, pandas! If you’re celebrating this Sunday, we hope you have the most wonderful time with your friends and family members, devouring chocolate bunnies and enjoying the nice spring weather. And even if you don't have any plans, we’ve got an eggcellent treat in store for you down below!
Bored Panda has gone on a hunt across the whole internet to find some of the most beautiful, creative and impressive Easter eggs the world has ever seen. So enjoy scrolling through this list that might inspire you to go all out with your paint brushes this weekend, and be sure to upvote all of the pics that you think would make the Easter Bunny proud!
This post may include affiliate links.
Pysanky, Aka Ukrainian Easter Eggs, Made By My Mother
My Beautiful Easter Eggs
My Mom Is Homophobic And Forced Me To Decorate Eggs This Year. So I Made My Eggs Different Pride Flags. She Has No Idea
When I was a kid, I looked forward to dying Easter eggs all year long. My mother would hard boil dozens of eggs for my brothers and I, then would set up an extravagant spread of various colors, stickers, crayons, paint brushes and more to ensure we could create whatever beautiful visions we could imagine on our festive eggs. We weren’t too interested in eating the eggs, but we loved showing off our masterpieces and creating a few that we would send rolling down the driveway to race one another. Easter was never a huge holiday for myself or my family, but I’ll look back on the memories of decorating eggs with my brothers for the rest of my life.
Easter is a traditionally Christian holiday, so the entire world does not partake in the festivities, but it is widely celebrated in about 95 nations. According to Kwintessential, many countries around the world have various ways of celebrating, with chocolate eggs and Easter egg hunts being common in the United States and the United Kingdom. As a kid, I was always lucky to receive an Easter basket with chocolates, and I would run around the yard searching for eggs filled with candy and, if I was really lucky, I might even find $5. Hot-cross buns are also popular in the UK on Good Friday, a delicious tradition I was happy to partake in when living there.
This Is How We Dye Easter Eggs In Serbia Using Only Natural Ingredients
We wrap the leaves around the eggs with old nylon stockings and tie them with yarn. For dying, we use onion skin.
Easter Eggs Hand-Painted By My Mom. Happy Easter From Germany
My Work Had An Easter Egg Contest And This Was My Submission
“In France the church bells do not ring for three days from Good Friday as a token of mourning for the crucified Christ,” Kwintessential explains. “Easter morning children watch the sky to see the bells ‘fly back from Rome’, while their elder family members hide chocolate eggs for them to find.”
Meanwhile, “Italians celebrate with a Paschal feast of roasted baby lamb and a crown-shaped bread studded with coloured candied eggs,” the team at Kwintessential goes on to note. “Dramatic processions take place including ‘devils’ rampaging around Prizzi and locals in Trapani carrying life-sized wooden sculptures through the streets for 10 hours. Easter processions are also spectacular in Spain, with special celebrations of note taking place in Valladolid, Malaga and Seville.”
Beautiful Hand-Painted Easter Eggs
This Is My Painting Of The Earth On An Ostrich Egg
Easter Eggs Hand-Decorated By My Uncle. Happy Easter From Croatia
In Germany, Easter is called Ostern and features celebrations including the lighting of Easter Fires and preparing special meals. “Unique festivities take place in Traustein, where riders in traditional Bavarian costume take part in an Easter horseback parade and there’s a sabre dance to celebrate the victory of spring over winter,” Kwintessential explains. “In the village of Oberammergau, a special Easter Passion Play takes place every 10 years.”
I Made The Medieval Manuscript Horse Into An Actual One Using Wooden Eggs. Happy Easter
My Van Gogh Masterpieces On The Easter Eggs
I Never Got Around To Posting My Easter Eggs, But This Is Professor Eggsavier And Eggward Scissorhands
“In Sweden, this time of year is called Påskdagen and is predominantly a secular holiday, celebrated with a meal of eggs, herring, and Jansson’s Temptation (potato, onion and pickled sardines baked in cream) and where children may dress up as ‘Easter witches’,” Kwintessential writes. “Meanwhile, close by in Norway, many use the holiday to read mystery books and watch deceptive series, calling it Paaskekrim or ‘Easter-Crime’.”
My Father's Ukrainian Easter Eggs Are Made From Emu Eggs. Banana For Scale
My Attempt At Scratched Easter Eggs
Dragon Egg I Made With Push Pins And Painted With Glitter Polish
“In Mexico, Easter celebrations involve two big observances, Semana Santa (Holy Week) and Pascua (Resurrection Sunday to the following Saturday),” Kwintessential shares. “Starting on Palm Sunday, Semana Santa sees Passion Plays take place and locals buy special elaborately woven palms from outside churches, before hanging them on their doors to ward off evil. Easter Sunday morning marks the start of Pascua, where great celebrations follow the morning service, with towns often having fêtes including stalls and even fairground rides.”
My Family Uses Natural Dyes And Leaves For Easter Eggs Each Year
My Grandpa Takes His Easter Egg Hunt Seriously
Easter Egg Decoration Of Evenflowstudio
If you’re curious why we dye Easter eggs in the first place, it turns out that the tradition goes back thousands of years. “There is evidence that the Trypillian culture that lived in Central Europe from 4,500 BC to 3,000 BC dyed eggs,” Melissa Locker at Southern Living writes. “Generally, historians seem to think that the custom got started when the ancient Persians, or Zoroastrians, painted eggs for Nowruz, or Persian New Year, according to The Kitchn. That custom continues today among some Persian families who dye eggs to mark Nowruz.”
I Made An Easter Egg Today. I'm Going To Give It To My Mom And Try To Score Some Daughter Points
My Office Held An Easter Egg Decorating Contest. I'm Not Artistically Inclined
Egg Decoration (Great Idea From #betterhomesandgardens ... Use Temporary Tattoos ... So Many Possibilities
While we can’t know for sure exactly when Christians began dyeing Easter eggs, the tradition of drawing on eggs with wax and dye may have come from Ukraine in the 10th century, when Christianity spread there. “In the Greek Orthodox tradition, dyed red eggs have marked the occasion since Mary Magdalene went to visit the tomb of Jesus and discovered that he was no longer there and her snack basket of eggs turned bright red,” Locker explains.
My Easter Eggs, 2020. Patterns Were Carved Into The Shell By A Needle
Happy Easter
Easter Eggs
Locker goes on to note that it wasn’t until the late 19th century that eggs became treats for children, “thanks in part to the Victorians who loved a good old tradition.” Their enthusiasm for historical fun “helped bring the art of dyeing Easter eggs into the modern era. Easter-egg hunts came next, and the White House got in on the fun, hosting the first annual Easter Egg Roll in 1878.”
Easter Eggs From Transylvania
My Friends Invited Me Over For Their Easter Egg Decorating Competition. They Thought I Was Toast When I Dropped My Egg. I Improvised And Won
My Little Easter Hats For Eggs
We hope you’re enjoying these creative, beautiful and impressive Easter egg masterpieces, pandas! Feel free to steal some ideas from this list if you have plans to dye eggs this weekend, and let us know in the comments below what the most magical Easter eggs you’ve ever seen were. Then, if you’re interested in checking out a previous Bored Panda article featuring even more fabulously decorated Easter eggs, you can find our last list on the same topic right here!
My Easter Egg This Year
My Three-Year-Old Son Is Obsessed With Dragons. So I Made Him Some Dragon Eggs For Easter. They Are Nothing Special, But I Hope He Likes Them
I made them by taking aluminum foil and shaping it into eggs. Then I took white clay, made a bunch of tiny circles, and placed them from the bottom up. Then I baked the eggs and painted them.
First Try For Easter Eggs This Year And Verry Happy With The Result
I Tried Painting Eggs Using The Pysanky Method. It's Very Time-Consuming But Kinda Therapeutic
Easter Felt Eggs
Easter Egg Coloring With Ties
Cool Easter Eggs Me And My Grandma Made
After Seeing Ed Sheeran On Saturday Night My Son Wanted To Design This For His Easter Egg Decoration Competition. Meet Egg Sheeran
My Easter Eggs. It's Not With The Usual Materials, But I Hope That's Ok
I Always Love The Colors My Wife And Kids Make On Their Easter Eggs
I Made Chocolate Easter Egg. It's A Hollow Shell, But I'll Probably Fill Them With Truffles, Enrobed Confit Orange Strips, And Mini Eggs
Painted Easter Eggs
The Bingo Hall, My Grandma Goes To, Is Having An Easter Egg Decoration Contest. Here Is Her Submission
I Made Some Dragon Easter Eggs
For The Last Three Years, My Girlfriend Has Had An Egg Dying Party Before Easter. I Van Gogh Every Year
I Decided To Make A Space-Themed Easter Egg
My Goddaughter's Angry Chicken Easter Egg. I Don't Know About You, But It Made Me Smile
Easter Eggs With Food Coloring
I Can't Stop Printing These Easter Eggs
I Need To Start 3D Printing More Egg Holders For My Horror Collection. I'll Have To Move The Non-Horror Eggs To Another Area
Lava Easter Egg I Made. Careful It's Hot
Some Eggs I Painted For Easter
I Tried Putting Something More Interesting On The Easter Eggs
This list is full of gems. That's the kind of thing I come to bored panda for!
There are some hugely talented and imaginative people out there, I love posts like this
I loved these! I like the natural dyes from plants and stuff, I’m planning to decorate eggs and hide them for my chickens lol
I almost did not click on this article. So glad I did! My youngest kids are teens now and have not interest in dying eggs anymore. I think I may go dye eggs alone today! I am going to try the horror ones!
I hope this inspires them to think out of the box and get really creative! Happy Easter!!!
Load More Replies...I finally understood Easter eggs when I started attending an Eastern-rite church. They don't eat any meat during Lent (six weeks leading up to Easter)... but also no fish and no eggs, .... totally vegan. For the whole 40 days, not just Fridays. Well, you can choose when to kill the livestock, or when to fish. But you can't tell the chicken not to lay eggs. And since untreated eggs last a long, long time, by the time Lent is over, you've got a TON of eggs you've been saving. So when you finally break fast (breakfast? Get it?), you've got a TON of eggs. So for Easter breakfast, it's kinda totally natural to get a little egg-cited.
Wow. Overall, these are beautiful. Such artistry. Others are funny. I wish there was room for a description for the one from countries/heritages/naturally dyed. I know I can Google but would be neat to read their stories about their heritage and how they're made.
I guess I don't really understand this. Are most of these eggs hollowed out?
Can't say for all, but I know in my region of Europe, we just hard boil all the eggs in dye ingridients and eat them in the Next few days.
Load More Replies...I love all of the pisanki representation on this list. Such an absolutely beautiful tradition.
I would hate to crack the shells of these beautiful pieces of art!
This list is full of gems. That's the kind of thing I come to bored panda for!
There are some hugely talented and imaginative people out there, I love posts like this
I loved these! I like the natural dyes from plants and stuff, I’m planning to decorate eggs and hide them for my chickens lol
I almost did not click on this article. So glad I did! My youngest kids are teens now and have not interest in dying eggs anymore. I think I may go dye eggs alone today! I am going to try the horror ones!
I hope this inspires them to think out of the box and get really creative! Happy Easter!!!
Load More Replies...I finally understood Easter eggs when I started attending an Eastern-rite church. They don't eat any meat during Lent (six weeks leading up to Easter)... but also no fish and no eggs, .... totally vegan. For the whole 40 days, not just Fridays. Well, you can choose when to kill the livestock, or when to fish. But you can't tell the chicken not to lay eggs. And since untreated eggs last a long, long time, by the time Lent is over, you've got a TON of eggs you've been saving. So when you finally break fast (breakfast? Get it?), you've got a TON of eggs. So for Easter breakfast, it's kinda totally natural to get a little egg-cited.
Wow. Overall, these are beautiful. Such artistry. Others are funny. I wish there was room for a description for the one from countries/heritages/naturally dyed. I know I can Google but would be neat to read their stories about their heritage and how they're made.
I guess I don't really understand this. Are most of these eggs hollowed out?
Can't say for all, but I know in my region of Europe, we just hard boil all the eggs in dye ingridients and eat them in the Next few days.
Load More Replies...I love all of the pisanki representation on this list. Such an absolutely beautiful tradition.
I would hate to crack the shells of these beautiful pieces of art!