The Cutest Ladybug Craft for Toddlers Using Circles and Paper Punches
If you’re on the hunt for a hands-on ladybug craft for toddlers that brings learning front and center, this one’s a winner. It’s bright, bold, and packed with circles, my toddler and preschool group loved every second of it.
It’s got everything: shapes, colors, fine motor work, and enough circles to make a geometry teacher weep with joy.
There’s no need to sneak in the learning here, toddlers want to learn. They’re naturally curious, wildly enthusiastic, and this craft meets them right where they are… with paper punchers in one hand and googly eyes in the other.
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Materials You’ll Need For Your Ladybug Craft



Here’s what we grabbed for our circle-crazy buggy masterpiece:
- Red construction paper (for the big ol’ ladybug body)
- Black construction paper (spots, head, and that cute little bug stripe down the back)
- Scissors
- Glue stick or school glue
- Googly eyes (optional, but HIGHLY recommended for the maximum adorableness factor)
- Circle punches (if you have them — this made it 1000x easier and way more fun)
- Something round to trace (we used a large bowl)
Honestly, use what you’ve got. If you’re team “freehand the circle and hope for the best,” I salute you. If you’re team “precision punches only,” that totally works too.
And if ladybugs are your thing right now, make sure to check out my fun ladybug counting pack as well as this post from National Geographic for some ladybug facts!
Let’s Talk About Circles

This craft is such a great excuse to explore shapes with toddlers and preschoolers.
You can point out:
- Big circle for the body
- Smaller circles for the dots
- Medium circle for the head
We counted circles as we made them. (“Let’s add 1… 2… 3… 4 black spots!”) Then we compared sizes. (“Which is bigger, the ladybug’s body or their spots?”)
One little one shouted, “THIS LADYBUG IS A CIRCLE MONSTER!” and honestly, I’m considering making that our official craft title.
Step-by-Step Instructions

Before we start with our instructions, take a minute to think about your relationship with scissors.
Are you a hand them over type of person, or leery to start?
I personally think this is such an important skill for littles to learn when they are ready, I would love for you to check out some ways to get started with scissor skills. It really is exciting when you watch those first few snips!

Trace and Cut a Big Red Circle
Use a bowl to trace a big circle on red paper. Have your child cut it out if they’re able, or you can pre-cut for younger kids.
Cut the Head and Line
We cut a small black circle for the head and a straight black rectangle for the line down the middle of the back.

Hole Punch the Spots
The paper punchers stole the show.
I mean, who knew punching holes could be so satisfying? (Answer: every toddler ever.)
Kids went wild punching black dots for the ladybug’s back.
Bonus, great fine motor work!

Assemble Your Bug
Glue everything down, the stripe, the head, and the spots.
I added dots of glue for my kiddos who needed a little extra help, but those 2+, they looove to squeeze all the glue…all.the.glue.
Add Eyes
Googly eyes are optional but come on, when is it not a good time to glue eyeballs onto something?
Why This Craft is Awesome (Beyond the Obvious Cuteness)

- Color Recognition
We talked about red and black, but you can easily switch it up! Why not make rainbow ladybugs? Green ones? Blue polka-dotted rebels? - Shape Talk
It’s a shape-tastic opportunity to reinforce the word “circle” and explore sizes. - Fine Motor Practice
Cutting, punching, gluing, every part of this activity supports those growing hand muscles. - Creativity
Some kids added extra spots. One decided her ladybug had “twenty-four babies” and was placing them all around the mama. (I did not fact-check the bug science there. We’re going with it.)
One of my favorite moments from this craft is when a sweet 2-year-old was checking out his circle collection, (now imagine this with fun voice changes) he grabbed the circle body “This is BIG” he said in a big deep voice. Then grabbing a little circle spot “this is tiny” he said in a little whisper.
I can’t even with the adorable some days!
Real Talk Corner

I’m not one for 40-step Pinterest crafts that make you want to cry into your construction paper. (even though I want to do them all!)
So, this one hit that sweet spot of:
- Low prep (you can set this up during a quick moment of free play)
- Open-ended (spots can go anywhere, there’s no “wrong” way)
- Visually adorable (you know I’m using these for a bulletin board)
- Skill building (those kids were counting and sorting without even knowing it)
Also: that paper puncher deserves a Teacher’s Choice Award. The excitement level when a kid punches out their first “perfect” circle? Elite.
Bonus Tips
- Make it a Matching Game!
Cut extra dots and play a spot-matching game first. Count them into groups, sort by size, or roll a dice and add that many dots to your bug. - Add Movement
Pretend your bugs are real, flap them through the air, crawl them across the floor, or make a “Bug Parade.” I love pairing movement with art to stretch the learning. - Story Time Add-On
Pair this craft with a book like The Grouchy Ladybug by Eric Carle or Ladybug Girl. Crafts + books = instant literacy extension!
Add in more bug fun with this bee craft that is a favorite around here!
Making It Work for Mixed Ages

One of my favorite things about this ladybug craft for toddlers is how easily it works across a whole crew of ages, because most of us aren’t running a classroom full of same-age kids.
We’ve got twos and threes and fours (and sometimes fives) all crafting at the same table, sharing glue sticks, and making art that’s as unique as they are.
Here’s how it played out in my group:
The Littlest Ladybug Artists (Ages 2–3)
My youngest kiddos were OBSESSED with the paper punches. Like, could-have-done-it-for-hours obsessed. Some punches turned into half-circles, some paper ripped, and honestly? It was still a total win.
I let them go wild with the punches until they were ready to move on, and when they were, I handed over a few clean black circles. We counted them together, named the colors, and turned glue time into learning time. Slow, sticky, joyful learning.
My 3–4 Year Olds: Punch Pros in the Making
This crew has been doing crafts with me a bit longer, and their hands are a little stronger. They picked up the process quickly and dove into it like tiny crafting pros.
The joy of popping out a perfect circle never gets old. I saw a lot of intentional work happening here, punch, line up, glue, repeat. It made my fine-motor-loving heart so happy.
The 4+ Crowd: Ready for the Upgrade
For my oldest group, I gave them the choice: punch the dots or cut them out yourself. Most still chose the puncher because it’s just plain fun.
Several were excited to trace and cut their own circles too. The focus and concentration on their faces? Craft-time gold.
My mixed age group really had a great time trying out this butterfly symmetry craft as well during our bug unit.

Check out my NEW Fine motor skills pack. This printable pack will give you over 25 ideas for fun fine motor skill trays and over 50 printables for some quick and easy print and play activities!!
Why This Ladybug Craft is a Go-To Favorite
Whether you’ve got curious 2-year-olds trying out paper punches or confident preschoolers cutting their own spots, this ladybug craft meets every learner where they’re at. It’s simple, colorful, adaptable, and full of opportunities to talk about circles, colors, and bugs.
Plus — it’s one of those crafts where you know they’re learning, and they know they’re having fun. Win-win. 💛
Want more fine motor, skill-building fun? Check out this simple but oh so fun flower craft or browse more of my printable activities here.





