Craft Activity · Father’s Day · Kids & Family · All Ages


If your dad has been delivering groan-worthy puns since before you could roll your eyes, this Father’s Day craft was made for him. This adorable pop-up card opens to reveal a little corn family – and the punchline hits the moment Dad opens the cover: “What does the little corn call his father? Pop-corn!”
It’s sweet, it’s silly, and it takes less than an hour to make. Kids love the drawing part, parents love watching Dad’s face, and Dad loves that someone finally appreciates his humor. Honestly? Everyone wins.
What You’ll Need
Age Range: 5 and up (with adult help for younger kids) | Time to Make: 30–45 minutes | Cost: Almost free!
Cardstock: One sheet of white (for the inside) and one sheet of light green (for the cover)
Markers: Yellow, green, dark green, and black
Optional but highly recommended: A white paint pen or white gel pen for eye highlights – this is the secret to making the corn characters look extra cute
Scissors
Glue stick
A “Happy Father’s Day” sticker (or just draw one – totally counts!)

How to Make the Pop-Up “Pop-Corn” Card
Step 1: Build the Pop-Up Mechanism
This is the magic of the whole card, and it’s easier than it looks!
1. Take your white cardstock and fold it in half so it opens like a greeting card.
2. With the card still folded, make two parallel cuts on the folded edge – about 1 inch apart and 1 inch deep. Think of cutting a small rectangular notch into the fold.
3. Open the card and push that cut-out strip inward, toward the inside of the card. Crease it firmly so it forms a little rectangular platform that stands up when the card is open – this is your pop-up tab!
4. Close and reopen the card a few times to make sure the tab pops up cleanly. If it droops, just reinforce the folds with your fingernail.
Pro Tip: Test the pop-up before gluing anything onto it. You want to make sure the tab stands up on its own before your cute corn characters are attached!






Step 2: Draw Your Corn Characters
On a separate scrap piece of white paper (not the card), draw your corn duo. You’ll cut them out and glue them on – this way, if your drawing doesn’t turn out perfectly, you can just start over without ruining the card.
1. Draw one big corn cob (that’s “Pop”) and one smaller corn cob (that’s “Corn”). Stand them side by side with their green husks hugging at the base – like a little family portrait!
2. Use yellow for the kernels, light green for the outer husk, and dark green for depth and shading at the base.
3. Give each character two little eyes and a smile with a black marker. Keep it simple – dot eyes and a curved line are all you need.
4. If you have a white paint pen, add a tiny white dot in each eye. This small touch makes them look alive and adorable. (I tried this without the white pen once and it just wasn’t the same – totally worth hunting one down!)




Step 3: Draw the Popcorn Clouds
On the same scrap paper, draw 8–10 fluffy little popcorn shapes – think small, lumpy cloud shapes in yellow. These will be scattered all around the inside of the card to make it feel like popcorn is flying everywhere when the card opens.
Pro Tip: Make them different sizes! A mix of big and small popcorn clouds looks more dynamic and fun than uniform-sized ones.
Step 4: Cut Everything Out
Carefully cut out your corn family and all your popcorn clouds. For younger kids, this is a great moment to practice scissor skills – the shapes are forgiving and don’t need to be perfect!
Step 5: Assemble the Inside
Now comes the satisfying part – putting it all together!
1. Glue your corn family onto the front face of the pop-up tab. Center them so they’re sitting right in the middle of the card when it opens.
2. Glue the popcorn clouds all around the white background of the card’s interior. Scatter them freely – there’s no wrong way to do this.
3. Write “POP CORN” in big, bold letters at the bottom of the white interior, just below the pop-up tab. Use your boldest marker for this!
Fun Variation: Let your child write “POP CORN” in their own handwriting. Wobbly letters from a 6-year-old? Dad will treasure it even more.


Step 6: Attach the Green Cover
Take your light green cardstock and fold it in half. Glue your completed white card onto the inside of the green cardstock – this sandwiches the card neatly, hides the back of the pop-up cuts, and gives the whole thing a clean, polished look. The green becomes your outer cover.


Step 7: Decorate the Front Cover
This is where you write the setup for the joke! On the front of the green card, write:
“What does the little corn call his father?”
Add your “Happy Father’s Day” sticker or bubble lettering at the top of the cover. Sprinkle a few small hearts or mini popcorn shapes around it if you’re feeling extra.
When Dad opens the card, the corn family pops up and delivers the punchline all on its own. Cue the Dad-level laughter! 🌽


Why This Card Is Extra Special
Store-bought cards are fine, but a handmade pop-up card? That’s something Dad will actually keep. It takes a little time and creativity, which is exactly the kind of gift that means the most – especially coming from kids.
Beyond the cuteness factor, this craft is genuinely great for children. It sneaks in real skills: fine motor practice from cutting and drawing, spatial thinking from building the pop-up mechanism, and the pure joy of making someone else laugh with a perfectly-timed pun.
And let’s be honest – Dad has been waiting years for someone to finally acknowledge that his jokes are, in fact, hilarious. This card is that acknowledgment.

Fun Variation: Turn this into a Father’s Day party activity! Set up a crafting station with pre-folded cards, cut-out corn templates, markers, and glue sticks. Kids at a birthday party or classroom celebration can each make one to bring home – it’s a party favor AND a craft all in one.
More Father’s Day Ideas to Keep the Fun Rolling:
10 Reasons to Make This Colorful Father’s Day Popsicle Stick Wall Hanging With Your Kids
How to Make a DIY #1 Dad Award Ribbon for Father’s Day (Kids Will Love This!)
Make Dad Feel Like Royalty: The “Dad, You Are My King!” DIY Pull-String Father’s Day Card
The Cutest 5-Minute Father’s Day Gift Wrap Trick (That Looks Like You Tried Super Hard)
Grand Slam Pop-Up: The 3D Baseball Father’s Day Card Your Kids Can Actually Make
The Cutest Father’s Day Craft Kids Can Make: A Handprint Trophy
