Hello and welcome to a post where we’ve added together all our best messages from the Easter Bunny. (If you’re Australian you might want our Easter Bilby resources instead.) Whether notes, letters or certificates, we bet your little one would love to hear from the most magical rabbit in the world this year.
Eggcellent Attitude Award
Good Egg Award
Eggcellent Behaviour Certificate
Ace Egg Roller Award
Award for Helping Others
Great Greens Gobbler
Ace Egg Hunter
Official Visitation Certificate
Funny Easter Bunny Note: Well Done for Being Good
I’ve Hidden Easter Eggs Around Your House
Try and Eat More Fruit
Be Good Until Easter
Will You Leave Me a Carrot?
Thank You For the Carrot
Easter Bunny Tidy Bedroom Certificate
Easter Bunny Envelope
Along with the little messages and certificates above, one of our favourite Easter resources is this full-length letter from the Easter Bunny. It’s a lovely thing for a child to find with the eggs on Easter Morning… adds a sprinkle of magic to the this holiday occasion.
Need another one? There’s at least one more letter from the Easter Bunny available on this page.
Looking for some blank Easter notepaper? Try these:
Thanksgiving Notes – Little notes to print and/or write on, saying what you give thanks for.
All out printables are created with kids in mind, and we hope they add a little extra magic to your Thanksgiving celebrations! Our favourite printables for this event are below:
Our Favourites:
Thanksgiving Gratitude Plate
Draw Your Thanksgiving Meal
Thanksgiving Bunting
Happy Thanksgiving Bunting
Thanksgiving Bunting
Natural Yellow Maple Leaf
Yellow & Red Maple Leaf
Brown & Yellow Oak Leaves
Green & Red Oak Leaves
Blank Harvest or Thanksgiving Note
Blank Harvest or Thanksgiving Note
Cornucopia Thanksgiving Note (Lined)
It’s always great to involve children in the spirit of Thanksgiving. You could encourage them to write about what they’re grateful for using our themed writing paper, or maybe just express their creativity with a little coloring. As well as keeping them entertained, these activities give them the chance to slow down and reflect on the importance of gratitude, which as we all know these days, is so good for their mental health too.
I’m Thankful for This Day
Blank Thanksgiving Notepaper
Pilgrim Hat Coloring
Turkey Coloring
Grateful for My Wonderful Husband
Grateful for the Wonderful People in My Life
Grateful for My Wonderful Wife
Grateful for My Beautiful Children
Thankful for the Love of My Friends
Thankful For the Love of My Family
Don’t forget that any printable resources you use for your Thanksgiving can offer a way to preserve these memories for years to come. Once you’ve used them as a family you can put them carefully away as treasured mementos that can be revisited each holiday season.
However you choose to celebrate, our printables are here to help make your Thanksgiving joyful and memorable. We hope you have a wonderful day!
Not long now until that spooky time of year – so we’ve collected a few of our favourite Halloween printables together below. Some are popular every year, others are new additions. Whatever you’re doing on the 31st of October, we hope you have a frighteningly good time!
Best Halloween Costume
Halloween Ghosts and Cat
Printable Ghosts
Good Spelling (Pink)
Paper Doll: Halloween Witch
Bemused Ghost
Happy Halloween Bunting
Halloween Bunting
Cupcake Wrappers: Spiders
Cupcake Wrappers: Halloween Party
Blank Witch Certificate
Halloween Note from Santa Claus
Halloween Award for Brushing Your Teeth
Three Witches
Witch Under Stars
Fill in the Witch’s Face
Happy Ever After
Man-Eating Plant Paper Basket
Witchy Chore Chart
Monster Chore Chart
Monstrously Good Marks
Monster mix
Halloween Party Invitation
Pumpkin Patch
Candy Corn
Black Cat
Scarecrow Party Bag
Scary Hand and Pumpkin
White Cat
Witch and Cauldron
In the mood to make some Halloween cards? Here are a couple of cute printable ones to write your spooky greetings in:
Mouse and Toad Halloween Card
Orange Spider Halloween Card
Or you could write a Happy Halloween message, using our froggy notepaper…
Happy Halloween Frog Notepaper
Halloween Frog Envelope
Frog Paper Basket
Vampire Bat Paper Basket
No Trick or Treat Posters
Trick or treating is great fun but it’s fine not to want to take part. You don’t need to give your reasons to opt out but one of the best ways to let trick or treaters know it’s not for you is to put a light-hearted notice up in your window. Here are a few which might help you out.
No Trick or Treat Halloween Poster
No Trick or Treat Happy Halloween Poster
No Trick or Treat Poster
No Trick or Treat Poster (Black and White)
If you’re looking for some simple paper decorations to hang around the house, you might also like our Halloween ghosts:
Oooo! And before you go, you might like to create some decorative jars full of spooky potion ingredients. If so, why not make use of our Witch’s Pantry Potion Labels. It’s a great way to get your house looking just like a witch’s hovel!
Yay, it’s that spooooooky time of year again and time to decorate accordingly! Here are our fave decorations from around our site. Hope you and your family have a scarily good time.
If you don’t happen to live deep inside a magic forest, you can still get that enchanted autumn look with these printable paper leaves. They look gorgeous in any room and are useful for any festival in fall, including Halloween.
Up next are these fabulously witchy pantry labels, for all your potion ingredients. Print and stick on jars and bottles all around your home to turn your house into a veritable witch’s hovel!
Good old-fashioned bunting is always a great fallback for Halloween. By all means print ours – it’s al free – or just use it for inspiration to make your own.
These fun poems with a witch’s spell theme make a lovely addition to your Halloween decor. Just print them out and pin them around the house. Or you could write some of your own!
Can you feel the Christmas magic yet? No doubt the kids can and are getting ready to write that all-important letter to Santa and Christmas list! With this in mind, we thought we’d put together a quick post to highlight all our free letter to Santa and Christmas list templates. So, if your child is writing his or her Christmas correspondence to that magical man at the North pole this week, perhaps these will come in handy:
Multiple Choice Letter to Santa
Christmas List and Letter to Father Christmas
Letter to Santa and Christmas List Template
My Christmas Wishlist
A Picture for Santa
Printable Christmas List
Need a Reply?
If your child has written a letter and/or Christmas list, or drawn a picture for Santa, you may be looking for a reply. Obviously, we have to keep it general, but we’ve created the following resources to help you out:
If the Christmas clock is ticking and your little one is dragging his or her heels about getting that Christmas List written, this little reminder from Father Christmas may just do the trick. Good luck and have a very merry Christmas – ho, ho, ho! x
Santa Claus or Father Christmas?
Many of our letters to Santa Claus are also available as letters to Father Christmas. This is because we know that people in different families and places call him by different names. In the UK, we find the preference is for “Father Christmas”, in the USA it’s “Santa”.
We’re sorry that we haven’t managed to provide two versions of absolutely every resource – we’ve had a lot to do and have been short on time. However, if there is an alternative version of any of our letters, you’ll be able to see a note and a link underneath it.
Hello dear visitors! By popular demand, we’ve made a summer issue of our Fairyland newspaper, the Midnight Messenger, available for you to print for your child.
The Midnight Messenger – Fairyland’s Newspaper! (Summer Issue)
We recommend printing it out and leaving under your child’s pillow sometime in the summer holidays as a magical surprise.
In this issue you can find out what’s been happening at Christmas House, where the Easter Bunny has been on holiday and what the Tooth Fairy’s been up to as of late. As always, our thanks to Leone Betts for all her hard work putting it together and for allowing us to make it free on this site.
Are you looking for the previous issue? It’s here.
What is the Midnight Messenger?
The Midnight Messenger is the newspaper which gets delivered all around the magical world – read by everyone from Santa and his elves to the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, and every other magical personality you can think of. And this summer, your child can read it too!
We’ve uploaded it as a PDF. Just click here or on the picture below to download or view it. It’s completely free. We hope it makes you and your little ones smile.
P. S.
If you enjoy this resource, please consider telling others. Our site survives because of people like you using it. Thanks x
More About the Midnight Messenger:
For those of you after more information about our Fairyland newspaper, it was first created in 2003 by L A Betts. It was early days for our site and as we didn’t have many visitors back then, after a couple of years we retired it. However, it carried on being delivered every month to magical folk of course, and has often mentioned in our other creations, such as the Father Christmas letters.
The Midnight Messenger is normally in black and white, but special issues like the one for Easter, are in colour. It regularly features news from well-known parts of the magical world, like Father Christmas’s house in the North Pole, and features many familiar characters such as Jack Frost, the Sandman and the Tooth Fairy. But it also features new characters your child won’t have heard of, such as the Worrying Witch, the Fortune-Telling Toad and all sorts of goblins, fairies and elves.
It’s always hard to know what people want more of, but if we sense the Midnight Messenger is popular, we’ll consider adding further issues to our site.
Hello lovely visitors! For a bit of extra fun we’ve published an Easter Issue of our newspaper form Fairyland, The Midnight Messenger, and made it free for you to download. It can be read by your children at any time in the run up to Easter.
The Midnight Messenger is the newspaper which gets delivered all around the magical world – read by everyone from Santa and his elves to the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, and every other magical personality you can think of. And this month, your child can read it too!
We’ve uploaded it as a PDF. Just click here or on the picture below to download or view it. It’s completely free. We hope it makes you and your little ones smile.
P. S.
If you enjoy this resource, please consider telling others. Our site survives because of people like you using it. Thanks x
Note from the Easter Bunny to go with this issue
Easter Bunny note to go with the Easter issue of The Midnight Messenger
If you have decided to leave a copy of the Midnight Messenger (above) somewhere for your child to find before Easter, you might like to put this note from the Easter Bunny with it, so that they know what it is.
It also lets your child know how good he or she has been and that that makes the Easter Bunny very proud.
More About the Midnight Messenger:
For those of you after more information about our Fairyland newspaper, it was first put together in 2003 by L A Betts. It was early days for our site and as we didn’t have many visitors back then, after a couple of years we retired it. However, it carried on being delivered every month to magical folk of course, and has often mentioned in our other creations, such as the Father Christmas letters.
The Midnight Messenger is normally in black and white, but special issues like the Easter one above, are in colour. It regularly features news from well-known parts of the magical world, like Father Christmas’s house in the North Pole, and features many familiar characters such as Jack Frost, the Sandman and the Tooth Fairy. But it also features new characters your child won’t have heard of, such as the Worrying Witch, the Fortune-Telling Toad and all sorts of goblins, fairies and elves.
It’s always hard to know what people want more of, but if we sense the Midnight Messenger is popular, we’ll consider adding further issues to our site.
Hello! We generally create printables for children but these days, Valentine’s day is for everyone. Far from being just for couples, we’re seeing cards sending love to all sorts of family members and friends, not to mention the wider world. Pink and red decorations appear in shops and homes alike and some people are even using it as an opportunity to spoil themselves. And why not? It’s good to love yourself, too.
So, with the aim of moving with the times, we’ve put the printables we thought you might find useful this Valentine’s Day here on one page. Thinking that the kids might want to help out, we’ve focussed on printable four-fold cards and colouring in. We hope you, your children, your family and whoever else is special to you enjoy them. Oh, and from all of us here at Rooftop Post, have a happy and magical Valentine’s.
Fairy Hearts Envelope
Fairy Hearts Notepaper
Valentine’s Day Unicorns
Cake of Hearts
Heart Paisley
Cute Dragon Carrying Heart
Four-Fold Valentine’s Card: Pink Rose
Four-Fold Valentine’s Day Card: Comedy Giraffe
Hearts Colouring Page
Valentine’s Day Hedgehogs Colouring
Love Birds
Valentine’s Day Swans
Four-Fold Valentine’s Day Card: Comedy Heart
Four-Fold Valentine’s Day Card: Red Hearts
Four Fold Valentine’s Day Card: Missing Piece
Hearts Frilly Cupcake Wrappers
Four-Fold Valentine’s Card: Flamingo
Pink Paper Chain Loops
Multi-Heart Colouring
Multi-Heart Colouring
Flamingo with Heart Handbag
Valentine’s Day Mermaid
Oh, and if you like the colouring picture of the mermaid above, you’ll find more in the mermaid section of our site, not to mention a mermaid treasure hunt! We’ve also got some other gorgeous resources featuring flamingoes, and if you’re looking for free flamingo cards to print from elsewhere on the web, we like these.
What to write in your Valentine’s Card:
It’s never easy to think what to write in your Valentine’s card, and of course, a lot depends on who you’re writing to.
From a Secret Admirer
For example, if you’re sending a card from a secret admirer, it’s best to stick to funny or lightly romantic – as a mystery sender you don’t want to sound too serious (because that can make some people nervous) and it’s attractive to have a sense of humour. If you’re really stuck, here are a couple of ideas:
I’m sending you this Valentine’s card to let you know that whenever I see you, you make me smile. Have a wonderful day!
Roses are red,
Violets are blue,
I’m incredibly lucky
To be friends with you!
I like you. Even more than chocolate/football/any other (light-hearted) favourite thing. Have a very happy Valentine’s Day!
You’re that “nothing” when people ask me what I’m thinking about.
For a Partner
On the other hand, if you’re writing to a long-term partner, pretty much anything goes. You know their likes and dislikes better than anyone, and even though you might feel as if you can’t think of anything, just take the plunge because most of your thoughts will be appreciated. Remember, this person already likes or loves you. If you’re really stuck, thanking them for all they do and is a good start, and should get you thinking about what those things are. Name them, if you can. After all, letting someone know you’ve noticed all those small ways they make your life nicer is always going to make them smile.
For Family and Friends
For friends or non-romantic family, think of the sorts of things you’d put in a normal greetings card and just edit those sentiments a bit to suit Valentine’s. Here are some examples:
Happy Valentine’s Day! I wanted to send you a card to say I hope your life is filled with love for the whole year ahead.
As it’s Valentine’s, I just wanted to let you know how much you are loved and appreciated by me (and all the family). Have a great day.
Wishing you a very happy Valentine’s Day from a family who loves you.
To my best friend, I thought I’d use Valentine’s Day to send you lots of love and let you know how special you are. My world is about a million times better for having you in it.
Croeso i popeth ar gyfer Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Sant! Welcome to all our St David’s Day printables!
It’s still early days for our St David’s Day resources and we’ll be adding more as the years go by. However we’ve already created some great celebratory printables below and we hope you and your children enjoy them. Have a very happy time on the 1st of March, as you remember the patron kindly, nature-loving patron saint of Wales.
Please note that parts of this page have been written in Welsh as well as English, in keeping with the spirit of celebrating Wales.
Traditional Welsh Lady
Welsh Woman in the Hills
Want to know more about how Wales is celebrating St David’s Day this year? You can find a list of events, as well as a bit of history on the Visit Wales website.
Baby Welsh Dragon
St David
If you’re a teacher or if you just fancy learning a bit of Welsh for fun, you might find these basic worksheets useful. They are designed to be easy enough for primary school children, but any learners can use them.
Welsh Vocab Worksheet
Welsh Vocab Worksheet
And here are a few more colouring pages, including a cute Welsh dragon drawn with thick lines that are easy to stay inside – ideal for younger children.
Lliwio Cennin Pedr
Daffodils Colouring
Welsh Lady in the Mountains
Welsh House and Rolling Hills
St David on the hill
Dewi Sant ar y bryn
St David – Do the little things
Dewi Sant – Gwnewch y pethau bychain
Decorations are next, so you can decorate your home. We think the Welsh dragon paper chains look especially lovely when they’re done. You just print them, cut out the strips and stick the ends together with a bit of glue or tape to form a chain.
Llywio Y Ddraig Goch
Y Ddraig Goch – Welsh Flag
Ddraig Goch – Red Dragon Party Bag
Cadwyni Papur Draig Goch
Daffodil
Daffodil Hanging Ornament
St David’s Day Colouring
St David’s Day Bunting
Dydd Gŵyl Dewi hapus i chi a’ch blant! x
Brave as a Welsh Dragon Certificate
Daffodil Head to Colour
Daffodil Head
Daffodil Head
Daffodil Head to Colour
And here are some printable St David’s Day cards, because it’s always nice to send something to let your family and friends know you ae thinking of them on the 1st of March, especially if Wales occupies a special place in their heart.
Cerdyn Y Ddraig Goch
Daffodils Greetings Card
Looking for a card to colour in? Below is a lovely Red Dragon card which should be fun for children to colour in themselves. It is suitable for younger and older children due to its strong, clear design with substantial lines and plenty of space for easy colouring, as well as some detailed parts. All in all, a great chance for children to get creative on St David’s Day.
Dyma gerdyn hyfryd gyda dyluniad clir a chyfeillgar o’r Ddraig Goch, sy’n sicr o fod yn hwyl i’w lliwio gan blant. Mae’r gofod mawr, ardal lliwio eang a manylion y draig yn rhoi cyfle i blant fod yn greadigol gyda’u dewis lliwiau. Mae’r llinellau cryf a’r elfennau dylunio syml yn addas iawn ar gyfer ystod oedran eang, o blant ifanc i’r rhai ychydig yn hŷn.
Looking for some ghosts to print out for Halloween? Here’s our collection. We hope you have fun decorating!
Vampyre Ghost
Bemused Ghost
Printable Ghosts
Crazy-Eyed Ghost
Love-Struck Ghost
Tired Ghost
One great way to use all these different ghost characters is to thread them all along a string. They look great! Oh, and don’t forget that you can also use out blank ghost template to draw your own.