Rainbow Cloud Pipe Cleaner & Fruit Loop Craft
A cheerful rainbow craft for kids that combines pipe cleaners, Fruit Loops, and a simple cloud shape for color sorting, fine motor practice, and weather-themed learning.
Why we love this activity
This rainbow cloud craft is one of those simple activities that feels playful, colorful, and secretly full of learning.
Kids get to thread Fruit Loops onto pipe cleaners, sort cereal by color, build rainbow arches, and attach everything to a fluffy cloud shape.
It is perfect for rainbow week, weather week, spring activities, St. Patrick’s Day, or anytime you want a low-prep fine motor activity that keeps little hands busy.
Because children are matching colors, sequencing the rainbow, and using careful finger movements, this craft works beautifully as both a creative project and a hands-on learning activity.
Materials needed
- Fruit Loops or colorful cereal
- Pipe cleaners in rainbow colors
- White cardstock, cardboard, or foam for the cloud
- Scissors
- Tape or glue dots
- Optional cotton balls for extra cloud texture
How to make a rainbow cloud craft
Set up the rainbow colors
Lay out pipe cleaners in rainbow order and pour colorful cereal into small jars, bowls, or a tray. Invite your child to sort the cereal by color before threading.
Thread the cereal
Have your child thread Fruit Loops onto each pipe cleaner. This is wonderful fine motor practice and gives kids a chance to name colors as they work.
Build the rainbow
Bend each pipe cleaner into a rainbow arch and tape the ends behind the cloud. Layer the colors from largest to smallest to create a bright rainbow shape.
Parent tip
If your child is still working on threading, use fewer cereal pieces and leave extra space on the pipe cleaner. For older kids, challenge them to build the rainbow in correct color order.
Learning benefits
This rainbow craft is simple, but it builds so many early learning skills.
Threading cereal strengthens fine motor muscles and hand-eye coordination. Sorting Fruit Loops by color supports visual discrimination and color recognition. Building the rainbow in order introduces sequencing and patterning.
It is also a natural way to start a conversation about weather, rainbows, clouds, rain, and sunshine.
Learning skills
Weather and rainbow products to pair with this activity
Extend this rainbow craft into a full weather-themed learning day with GoodnightFox weather printables and play materials.
Weather station pretend play
Set up a pretend weather station with forecast boards, weather symbols, and meteorologist role-play.
Shop weather station
Weather flashcards
Practice weather vocabulary with soft pastel weather cards, including rainbow, sun, rain, clouds, and storms.
Shop flashcards
Weather wood play rounds
Add wooden weather pieces to sensory bins, matching games, calendar time, and weather-themed play trays.
Shop play roundsQuestions to ask kids
- What colors are in your rainbow?
- Which color comes first?
- Can you sort the cereal by color?
- What weather do we need to see a rainbow?
- What happens after it rains and the sun comes out?
- Can you count how many cereal pieces are on each pipe cleaner?
More rainbow and weather activities
Rainbow threading
Save this rainbow threading idea for Weather Week, spring crafts, or a colorful fine motor activity.
Rainbow threadingRainbow milk experiment
Make colors swirl across milk while learning about surface tension and color mixing.
Rainbow milkSunset milk experiment
Explore warm colors, cool colors, and color mixing through a beautiful science activity.
Sunset milkRainbow cloud craft FAQ
How do you make a Fruit Loop rainbow craft?
Thread colorful cereal onto pipe cleaners, bend the pipe cleaners into rainbow arches, and attach them to a white cloud shape made from cardstock, cardboard, or foam.
What age is this rainbow craft best for?
This craft is best for ages three and up with adult supervision. Younger children may need help threading cereal and bending the pipe cleaners.
What do kids learn from a rainbow craft?
Kids can practice color recognition, sorting, sequencing, fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination, counting, and weather vocabulary.
Can I use this for Weather Week?
Yes. This craft pairs perfectly with weather lessons about rainbows, clouds, rain, sunshine, and the colors we see after a storm.
What can I use instead of Fruit Loops?
You can use pony beads, buttons, dyed pasta, paper circles, pom poms, or any small colorful item that can be sorted or threaded safely.
