It’s winter! It’s time to decorate snowflakes, study snow, and have a snowy day. Whether or not there’s actually a winter storm on the way, use these free snowflake printables to inspire your writing, science, and more. Printable snowflake bundles are flexible and can be used long after the last flake has melted.
Fill out the form on this page to get your complete Snowflake Bundle. Plus, check out some fun ideas for using each printable below.
large printable snowflake
We are teachers Make a portrait of a snowflake. Bring in a photo of yourself playing in the snow, or ask your students to take a photo of themselves in their winter clothes. Next, paste each student’s photo into the center of the snowflake. Students can decorate the photo and add a paragraph about what they were doing. Create a bulletin board that’s as unique as a snowflake. Give each student a snowflake to cut out and decorate. Next, students write unique facts about themselves on the snowflake. Use snowflakes to decorate your classroom door or bulletin board with the caption “We are as unique as a snowflake.”
printable medium size snowflake
We are teachers studying the symmetry of snowflakes. Students use these medium snowflakes to demonstrate how each snowflake is symmetrical. Then you can create your own symmetrical snowflake. Contrast Painting: Cut out snowflakes and place them on paper. Paint on the snowflake. Once the paint is dry, peel off the snowflake to reveal the white original snowflake. Study the crystals of snowflakes. If there is snow on the ground, look at it with a magnifying glass or microscope. Then use these snowflake printables, salt, and glue to create snowflakes with the same crystal properties.
printable small snowflakes
We are teachers Let’s decorate the winter alphabet. Cut out small snowflakes and give students large letters. Students create a winter alphabet by pasting snowflakes onto letters. Create a resist art snowflake. Cut out these snowflakes and use a hot glue gun to trace the snowflakes to get a template. Paint the snowflakes using liquid watercolor and sprinkle salt on top of the paint for maximum effect. Snowflake Mathematics. Use these snowflakes as manipulatives for math problems involving snowflakes. Students can use this to show how many snowflakes there are when seven snowflakes of one type and eight of another type fall from the sky. Or if eight of them fall and four of them melt on your tongue, how many will be left? Have students create self-portraits and use these snowflakes to decorate their portraits. What would they look like if they were the Snow Queen? As a snowman? Is it just covered in snowflakes?
Learn more: Sensational snow activities
snowflake writing paper
We Are Teachers Use this snowflake stationery to have students write about winter topics such as: What is your favorite thing to do when it snows? How do you spend your snow days? What can you only do when it’s snowing? Imagine you are explaining snow to someone who has never experienced it. How would you explain that? If you live in a warm region, what would happen if you woke up one day to find snow all over the ground? Students study animals that live in snow, such as arctic foxes and polar bears. You can write a sentence describing the animal and how it is adapted to life in the snow.
snowflakes of different sizes
We are teachers making 3D snowflakes. You can cut out these snowflakes and use the cutouts to create 3D snowflakes to post on your bulletin board or decorate your classroom. Sort the snowflakes. Give students scissors and encourage them to cut these snowflakes and sort them by size and other characteristics. Make a snowflake tree. Students cut out these snowflakes and place them on dowels or small branches to create a snowflake tree with the largest snowflake at the bottom and top.
Learn more: What is snow and how is it formed?
Get your free snowflake printable bundle!
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