Learn to Read Color Words with the RAINBOW!


Help your child learn to read color words with fun, hands-on activities! Boost early reading skills through play, crafts, and engaging learning strategies.

Learn to Read with Color Words and lidsLearn to Read with Color Words and lids

Use color words and lids for a hands-on rainbow activity for kids.  Here’s how to play.

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links.

Rainbows are so much fun to make, eat, play, find, and learn with. We had a tot-school with a theme of rainbows and I was trying to decide what to bring when I thought of my Baby Food Pouch lids. These things are amazing and so colorful that I knew my rainbow activity must make use of them!!! ( I will never buy Counting Bears manipulatives again)

Circles with color words written with colorful recycled lids for learning color wordsCircles with color words written with colorful recycled lids for learning color words

Learn to Read Color Words with the RAINBOW!

The lids are

  • Free
  • Stackable
  • Eco-friendly
  • Plentiful
  • Easy to come by and
  • Colorful

Want more fun? Try these 8 activities with lids!

Using my bag of lids, I quick traced around a cap and made a bunch of circles in the shape of a rainbow. If you look closely at the pictures you can see these pencil lines. (I’ve learned that kids don’t need perfection to have fun and have stopped stressing about having everything look “pinterstingly” perfect – life is just too short) 

Then, I traced each pencil circle with the color and wrote the color word in the circle.  I wanted this activity to be about matching AND learning to read the color words!

I may introduce this to my three year old like this…

“Today we are going to make a rainbow on this paper.  There are some words inside of each circle that will help us figure out which color circle to put here. Each word is a color word.  Look at this one, (point to the red one)  I see a short word inside of the circle and it is in the color red.  I bet this is the word red. (place a red cap on the circle.)  Can you find another red word to put a cap on?”

This is more of the “whole language” approach to this activity. Since I am part of the teaching crowd that believes in a mixed approach to teaching reading, I would also encourage him this way…

“Another way you can figure out or read the color word is by looking at the first letter in each word.  The letters and the sounds they make will give us clues.  This word starts with a “b.” (point to the word red again) I think of the sound that b makes, [b] and I get my lips ready with that sound [b]. What color word do you know that begins with the [b] sound?”

We then continued reading the color words and placing the caps on our rainbow until it looked like this.

After we were done, I had my 3 year old put away the colored caps and read all the color words to me.  He was very proud!!!

(After the kids did it, I realized there are white caps too and should have made circles for them too.  The kids just put the white caps ON the cotton balls and asked why they didn’t have circles.)

Rainbow Collage

Then we moved onto a more creative activity in which I just provided him with the cut papers in the Muffin Pan and let him make what ever he wanted. 

***Remember, mixing up your activities lets your kids experience different kinds of learning. 

Don’t forget to sneak in a few rainbow books into your home library too for extra rainbow fun with your child after doing these activities.

Want more? Get our list of Colorful Rainbow Books for Kids.

Colorful Rainbow Books for Kids.Colorful Rainbow Books for Kids.

Need some more ideas on how to play + learn + make rainbows???

Additional Rainbow Activities

You may also enjoy these activities with your child…



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