Pirate Party

Kids love pirates, and a pirate theme party is always a big hit. Whether your child loves Jake and the Never Land Pirates, Pirates of the Caribbean, Goonies, or all kinds of pirates, there are so many fun things you can do with a pirate theme that your child may want a pirate birthday party every year!

Pirate Party Invitations

Treasure Map Invitations

For text, try pirate lingo… “Ahoy Matey! Ye be invited to Captain [Child’s Name here] Pirate Party. Chart your course fer [address], we’ll be settin sail the [6th of June] at [time]. Wave yer flag if ye be attendin, or call by phone [phone number].

Change the text to fit your party as you like.

For a Pirates of the Caribbean Party, you can say “Join us as we sail across the Caribbean in search of Aztec Gold”!

Instead of cutting your invitations neatly, try tearing them apart to give them rougher edges, or used fancy edged scissors. You can also slightly burn the edges.

To age your paper and give it that authentic treasure map look, follow these steps:

  • Crinkle them a little (not too much, they need to be legible)
  • Make some strong tea – it should be nice and dark
  • Put the tea in a spray bottle
  • Lightly spray the invitations with the tea
  • Dry in the sun, with a hairdryer, or with an iron

If you don’t want to bother with the tea, just use parchment paper (available at office supply stores) which already has an aged look to it. Finish them off with parchment paper envelopes, sealed with glue gun sealing wax. (This stuff is great – looks like a wax seal, but it comes in sticks which fit in your mini glue gun – It is more pliable than regular wax, so it mails better!)

Party Decorations

Treasure Chest

>A treasure chest makes a great decoration for a pirate party. You can decorate a cardboard box, or buy a plastic treasure chest. You can use it as a toy box after the party.

Skeletons and Scary Things

For a Pirates of the Caribbean Party, raid your Halloween decorations. Skeletons look great hanging around the house. Add an eye patch, bandana, pirate hat and coat to a large plastic skeleton for an authentic-looking skeleton pirate.

Take the Wheel

Cut a ship’s wheel out of cardboard and hang it on the wall for an easy (and free!) pirate party decoration.

Aw, Coconuts

Place some coconuts around for a tropical island look. For extra fun, you can open them up and let the kids try some of the coconut milk inside.

Tableware

Pirate Colors

For a pirate party, black tableware looks great, or black with red accents. You can also go with gold tableware to go with all your pirate treasure.

Party Food and Snacks

Fruit Kabobs

To a kid, anything on a spear is cool. I like to cut the tips off the skewers just to be safe. Add pineapple, grapes, whatever you think your group will eat. Call them fruit spears and top them off with a maraschino cherry cannonball.

Tropical Fruit

Fresh tropical fruits are popular with hungry pirates. Try some of these:

  • Pineapple
  • Bananas
  • Kiwi
  • Starfruit

Chicken Peg Legs

Chicken wings make great ‘peg legs’ that kids will eat up!

Walk the Plank

Have granola bars or graham crackers as snacks and call them planks.

Ants on a Plank

Turn the traditional “ants on a log” (peanut butter on celery sticks, topped with raisins) into a fun pirate treat by calling it ants on a plank.

Birthday Cakes

Treasure Island Cake

This cake is super easy to make, and will serve a large group of kids.

Make an 9 x 13″ cake and frost it light blue (water). Make a round cake and frost it light brown (sand). To get light brown frosting, you can buy the paste food coloring in brown and mix it with white frosting. You can also sprinkle graham cracker crumbs in the frosting to give it an authentic ‘sandy’ look.

Put the round cake (island) on top of the ‘water’ cake. Add some plastic palm trees, and a couple of toy pirates. Root beer barrels make great edible props on this cake. Use mini candy bars stacked on top of each other for a treasure chest, then add a few Skittles around it as jewels.

Party Games and Activities

Pirate Names

This is not really a game or activity, but is a lot of fun anyway. You can assign each child a pirate name, and put it on a nametag. For pirate names, there is a really fun pirate book called Everything I Know About Pirates by Tom Lichtenheld. It has a chart you can use to make up great pirate names.

You may want to work in the child’s real name like ‘Long Tooth Tim’ or something along those lines. Another alternative is to let kids come up with their own pirate names (better for older kids).

Pin the Parrot on the Pirate

Play a pirate variation of this classic party game. You can make your own pirate and parrot, or purchase a paper one.

Walk the Plank

There are a lot of ways to do this. A long board on the ground can serve as a plank, and you can have the kids try to balance on it. You can blindfold older kids, to make it a little more difficult (and fun) for them.

Another variation is to place the plank (tightly secured) over a kiddie pool. Add some toy sharks for fun. You can also do this with an ironing board, which is wider and therefore easier for younger kids. Note: If you do this activity, supervise at all times, and never leave a pool of water where little kids may fall into it!

Party Favors

Pirate Treasure Chests

Use plastic pirate chests as an alternative to loot bags. They hold lots of stuff, kids love to get them, and they find so many creative uses for them after the party. It’s a great toy for a kid’s imagination.

Pirate Treasure

Get plastic pirate jewels and use them to decorate your cake, scatter them across as table as added decoration, give them as prizes for party games, or send them home in pirate loot bags or treasure chests.

Pirate Coins

Put toy coins in the goodie bags or treasure chests, or use them as prizes for party games.

Eye Patches

Pirate eye patches are an easy and affordable way to turn your party guests into pirates. Kids can wear them at the party and take them home for more make-believe pirate fun.

There are so many fun things to do with a pirate theme, your child may want a pirate party every year.

Harry Potter Party

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Whether you are celebrating your child’s birthday or the birthday of the boy wizard himself (July 31), there are all kinds of reasons to have a Harry Potter party. There are so many great ‘props’ available for a Harry Potter party, kids of all ages (even the adult ones) can’t help but have fun with it!

Harry Potter Party Kit

Get everything you need with this Harry Potter theme party kit.

Harry Potter Invitations

Harry Potter Hogwarts Invitation

There are a lot of fun ways to create your own clever invitations for a Harry Potter party. Pick up some parchment paper, available at your local office supply store to give your invitations an authentic Hogwarts look. For the invitation wording, look to the first Harry Potter book (Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone aka Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone) to see Harry’s first letter from Hogwarts. It was written in green ink with a purple wax seal on the outside. A sample invitation based on this letter is shown to the right.

Sample Text for Hogwart’s Invitation

This is the wording I used for a Harry Potter party invitation. For those who don’t know, Muggles are non-magical people, Ollivanders is the name of the store that sells magic wands, and in the world of wizards, owls deliver the mail. Over 20 children were invited to this party, so we chose to not have them bring gifts. I left in the line asking them not to bring gifts. Change it as it fits your needs – be creative! The Hogwarts crest was at the top of the page. This is the wording of the rest of the invitation:


Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry

Headmaster: ALBUS DUMBLEDORE (Order of Merlin First Class Grand Sorc. Chf. Warlock Supreme Mugwump, International Confed. of Wizards)

Dear Mr. (or Miss) [Child’s Name Here]:

We are pleased to inform you that you have been invited to a celebration at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in honor of [birthday child’s name here] [age here] birthday. You can wear wizard attire, or, if you prefer, dress in the Muggle manner. Magic wands will be provided by Ollivanders. The celebration will take place on [party date] from [party start time] to [party end time]. Snacks will be available. This opportunity for [birthday child’s first name] to share a magical time with friends is his birthday present so please, no gifts. We await your own by no later than [RSVP date]. If you are unable to reply by owl, you can RSVP to [email address here, if you like] or by Muggle phone at [phone number].

Yours Sincerely,

[parent name signed]
[parent name typed]
Deputy Headmistress (or Deputy Headmaster)


Wax Seal

If you want a wax seal on your invitations, I recommend glue gun sealing wax. It works like wax, but you put it in your mini glue gun. This means there is no smoke or flame, and it is softer than traditional wax, so it goes through the mail better.

For the seal itself, you can buy a Hogwarts wax seal. If you’d rather customize one of your own, you can make one out of Sculpey. The Hogwarts crest with an ‘H’ in the middle isn’t hard to do – just remember to create it backwards so it stamps properly! Be sure to chill the seal before you use it – you can set it on top of ice to keep it chilled while you work. The Sealing Wax sets up better that way.

Party Map

Want to include a map to the party location? Try printing an internet map on parchment paper and cut it into a small square (this way you can get four to a page). You can add the following words from the Marauder’s Map at the top:

Messrs. Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs Purveyors of Aids to Magical Mischief-Makers are proud to present The Marauder’s Map

You can also add this to your map: Look for Platform 9 3/4 to get to Hogwarts! Platform 9 3/4 is where the magical kids catch the train to Hogwarts. Put helium balloons on the mailbox or somewhere outside your house, and write 9 3/4 on them to make it easier for parents to find the house.

Delivering the Invitations

Harry Potter letter from Hogwarts envelope

Since it’s unlikely you can get an owl to deliver the invitations, you’ll have to find some other way! If you are hand-delivering invitations, you could roll them up like a scroll and tie them with a ribbon. If you are mailing the party invitations, get parchment paper envelopes. Try printing them on a computer with green ink. Underneath the child’s name, add: The Cupboard Under the Stairs above the address. (This is how Harry’s first letter was addressed.) Since they can’t come by owl post, try printing a picture of an owl on the outside.

Harry Potter Decorations

Turn Your Home Into Hogwarts

Boy dressed as Harry Potter at birthday party

When it comes to decorations for a Harry Potter party, I say go Hogwarts! You can turn your home into a castle, and it’s easier than you may think.

Castle Walls

With a roll of flagstone paper, you can turn an entire room into a castle. It looks amazing, and doesn’t cost very much.

Hogwarts Crest Hogwarts Crest peel and stick wall decal
See the picture of the boy with the Hogwarts Crest behind him? That was made on poster board (the kind with the grid which is very helpful for non-artistic types) and painted. If you’re not feeling confident in your artistic abilities, you can also buy a Hogwarts crest decal.

Platform 9 3/4

Platform 9 3/4 in King's Cross Station, London

If you have half a trolley laying around, you can build your own Platform 9 3/4 like this one inside King’s Cross Station in London. If not, you can buy a Platform 9 3/4 Poster that’s the same idea without needing an actual brick wall.

Another option is the awesome Platform 9 3/4 shower curtain. Hang it in a doorway and cut a slit up the middle. Kids cross through it to enter the party room.

Invite Harry Potter to the Party

Harry Potter cardboard cutout


Party guests will love having their photo taken with this Harry Potter standup When you use these kinds of props, you create the perfect opportunity for a photo. Snap a picture of each partygoer in front of your fabulous backdrop, and send it to them with your thank you note. Photos make a great souvenir from an unforgettable party!

Tableware

House Colors

For your Harry Potter party tableware,  you can choose colors from the Houses of Hogwarts. Gryffindor’s colors are scarlet and gold, Hufflepuff’s are yellow and black, Ravenclaw’s are blue and bronze (blue and gray in the movies), and Slytherin’s colors are green and silver.

Get Hogwarts theme tableware for your Harry Potter party.

Just Like Hogwarts

Another option is  to use solid gold colored plates, just like they use at Hogwarts. For cups, kids love plastic goblets. You can purchase them inexpensively from most party supply stores.

Harry Potter Party Food and Snacks

Pretzel Wands

Dip long pretzel sticks into frosting, then roll them in the sprinkles of your choice. Put them in a cup to serve.

Cauldron Punch

Cauldron Punch for Harry Potter Party

Mixing Kool-Aid and 7-Up makes a great drinkable potion. If you really want to have fun with it, get an Erlenmeyer Flask (scientific flask). Add a packet of Kool-Aid to your newly acquired flask. Then, in front of the kids, pour in some 7-Up. Don’t overdo it, because it is going to bubble and fizz right up to the top! Then pour the mixture into your punch bowl. Add a 2 liter of 7-Up, sugar (yes, you still need sugar even though you are mixing with 7-Up – I suggest 1/2 cup), stir and serve in plastic goblets. To really have fun with this, get a big plastic cauldron, put your punch bowl inside of it, then serve from the cauldron.

Pumpkin Juice

In Harry Potter, the kids at Hogwarts drink pumpkin juice. I have never tried real pumpkin juice, but if you serve orange Kool-Aid and call it pumpkin juice, the kids will most likely prefer that to the real thing! Another option is to make pumpkin smoothies. Blend canned pumpkin with milk and crushed ice, some sugar and a little cinnamon and nutmeg for a pumpkin-pie flavored treat.

Harry Potter Cakes

There are so many amazing options for a Harry Potter birthday cake. Whether you choose to get one from a bakery or make your own cake, you can make it amazing!

Castle Cake

Make 2 cakes in regular cake pans. Stack one on top of the other. For the towers, cut 2 ice cream cones in half the long way. Place one of the halves upside down at the base of each corner. Place a whole ice cream cone on top of each half, facing upright. You can add upside down sugar cones to the top if you want pointed rooftops.

If you want a gray castle, make gray frosting by adding black paste food coloring to white frosting. Frost the cake and the towers. If you are using the sugar cones, you can make dress them up a little by making a paste of powdered sugar & water, painting it on them, and rolling them (while still wet) in black sprinkles.

Castle Cake

The cake you see here was made for a “Knight” birthday party, but works well for a Harry Potter party.

Hogwarts Castle CakeCastle Cake from a Bakery

Don’t want to make your own Castle Cake? If you give the above information to your local bakery, they should be able to do it for you! This is a Harry Potter Hogwarts castle cake made by a bakery.

Hogwarts Cake Decorating Kit

Quidditch Cake

Make a cake that looks like a Quidditch field! Using either a regular cake pan or a sheet cake pan, bake your choice of cake. Frost the top green, and add three sticks with hoops (varying lengths) at each end. You could make these with Sculpey or use stir sticks with the plastic rings that seal the lids on gallons of milk, or use bubble wands. Use graham crackers to create the towers, and frost them in the colors of the school houses.

The Harry Potter Quidditch Cake pictured here was made by Kerry M. of Georgia. It’s a six-layer cake (4 yellow and 2 chocolate) with a layer of buttercream icing and covered in fondant.

The top of the cake is iced with green glitter icing and sprinkled with green sugar crystals for ‘grass..’ Angel food cake slices with fondant and painted with food coloring make the stands.

The house animal (red-gryffindor-lion, yellow-hufflepuff-badger, blue-ravenclaw-raven, green-slytherin-snake) is painted on the front of each house stand. The flags are strips of fruit rollup.

The base of the cake is meant to be ‘rock’ and is made from coco krispie treats (made with chocolate marshmallow) and have candy ‘grass’ tufts. The goal posts are made from spaghetti and lifesavers, secured with icing.

The people are made out of fondant and wrapped in fruit rollups (except Madame Hooch, who is wearing a fondant robe) and riding pretzel brooms with fruit rollup bristles. Two of the players have the bludger bats and one has the quaffle. Two bludgers and the golden snitch are coming off the cake via wire. Madame Hooch is standing by the trunk the balls/bats go in when not in play. It’s made from chocolate, chocolate marshmallows and cinnamon graham crackers.

Wizard Hat Cake

Wizard Hat Cake for Harry Potter party

Make a cake in an 9 x 13 ” cake pan. Turn the cake out. Trim the sides so the cake is shaped like a triangle with a point at the top (see photo below left). You can use the pieces you cut off to make an identical cake – trim the bottom straight if you don’t like the point. (see photo below right)

Note: If you are using store-bought frosting, you can get by with one can for both cakes if you are very frugal, but I recommend buying two cans.

Frost and decorate as you wish – use star-shaped sprinkles, or trim fruit leather into stars and moons if you wish! Frost black for a more traditional Harry Potter look.

This cake is very easy to make and decorate – the birthday child can help decorate too!

 Golden Snitch Cake

Cake pan for Golden Snitch Cake

Have you read the last Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows? Harry’s birthday cake (courtesy of Mrs. Weasley) is shaped like a golden snitch. Now you can have your very own golden snitch birthday cake – and it’s very easy to do. All you need is a ball cake pan.

Bake the cake according to the pan directions, then add your golden frosting (yellow food coloring to white frosting). Use icing and a decorating tip to add the wings, and then you have your Harry Potter golden snitch cake.

Castle Cake Pan

Harry Potter Party Games and Activities

Sort Students

Students at Hogwarts are sorted into four different houses – Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw & Slytherin – by an old hat known as the Sorting Hat. When you place it upon your head, it decides which house you belong in.

You can sort students into houses as well. You need an old-looking witches hat (or buy a Hogwarts Sorting Hat. Put the various house names on slips of paper and have each child draw one out to see which house they will belong to.

Note: Some kids – especially younger ones – will just want to be in Gryffindor House (like Harry, Ron & Hermione). Sorting into different houses is more fun for older kids – I suggest they be at least upper elementary!

Scavenger Hunt

Scavenger Hunts are a great party activity for all ages – they can easily be altered to make easier for young children or more difficult for older ones.

For a Scavenger Hunt at a Harry Potter party, there are a lot of great props available that are inexpensive:

  • Basilisks (plastic snakes)
  • Plastic frogs (Trevor, like Neville Longbottom’s frog)
  • Gold galleons (Use shiny toy coins for wizard money)
  • Sorcerer’s stones (decorative stones)
  • Golden snitch (ping pong balls spray painted gold with wings glued on)
Harry Potter Scavenger Hunt

Give the kids a list of what item to look for. If you have young children playing, add a picture of each item next to it to help them locate items without reading.

I have done this before as a ‘Gryffindor Common Room Lost & Found’ list. If you are making Goodie Bags (see below under Party Favors), kids can put items in their bags as they find them. If you made Broomstick Pencils (also under Party Favors, below), they can check off items with the pencil.

Magic Wands

Dowel Rods make great magic wands, and they’re cheap! You can get them at Hobby Lobby if you have one around you, and other craft/hobby stores.

As an activity you can let the kids decorate them. Put glue in one cup, and sequins or glitter in another. Let the kids dunk the ends to decorate.

DIY Magic Wands for Harry Potter Party

Bertie Bott Bean Tasting

This is a simple activity that usually gets a lot of laughs. In the books, Bertie Botts Every Flavour Beans are jelly beans that come in every flavor (even flavors such as ear wax!) There are some great flavors – like buttered popcorn – and some really terrible ones like dirt, pepper, sardines, and the very worst… vomit.

They come with a flavor chart so you can identify what you are getting. Let each child choose one, and see if they can guess the flavor. Keep a garbage can handy! Kids usually enjoy this – and get a lot of laughs from watching other kids faces as they taste these ‘treats’.

LEGO Harry Potter Hogwarts

Harry Potter Party Favors

Harry Potter Glasses

Everyone knows Harry Potter by his glasses. Party guests will have a blast with their very own pair of Harry Potter glasses.

Broomstick Pencils

To make these you need pencils and natural raffia. Put a small piece of tape sticky side out around the top of the pencil on the metal area near the eraser. Cut several pieces of raffia and lay them on the tape all the way around the pencil. Take another piece of raffia and wrap it around the taped area, tying down the other pieces of raffia. Tie it off and you have a broomstick pencil.

Harry Potter broomstick pencil craft

Chocolate Frogs

You can buy chocolate frogs that come with wizard cards (just like in the Harry Potter books), but it is more cost effective to make them. You need a frog candy mold They are easy to make – follow the directions on the package of chocloate candy melts.

In the Harry Potter books, the chocolate frogs come with ‘Famous Witches & Wizards’ trading cards. You can substitute the Harry Potter trading cards, or make your own witches & wizards cards.

Put them in baggies, tie them with a ribbon. Consider adding a ‘Honeydukes Sweet Shop’ tag (that’s the candy store in the wizarding world).

Chocolate frogs for Harry Potter party

Make Your Own Goodie Bags

Harry Potter party goodie bag

Cloth bags are easy to make, inexpensive, and a keepsake for party guests. Use a length of felt (how long depends on how many you need to make), and trace around something round – like a dinner plate. Cut out the felt circle, then punch a series of holes around the top.

There may be a tool that will do this easier, but I used a paper hole punch – a little tiring on the hands, but it worked fine. Thread some yarn through the holes, leaving the ends long enough to tie together. Put knots on the ends, so they don’t come unthreaded.

The bags can be used to carry party favors, or put scavenger hunt items in if you are having a scavenger hunt.

Lightning Bolt Tattoos

Harry Potter was always recognized by the distinctive lightning bolt scar on his tattoo. Give your party guests their own Harry Potter “scar” with lightning bolt temporary tattoos.

Magic Wands

Kids can make these themselves with dowel rods (see instructions for this in the Games & Activities section) or you can use glow sticks or even sticks you find outside.


Whether you are celebrating your child’s birthday or the birthday of the boy wizard himself (July 31), there are all kinds of reasons to have a Harry Potter party.

Secret Agent / Spy Party

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Your mission: Throw your child a great spy-themed birthday party. Secret codes, high security, everyone knows the password to fun is ‘spy party’!

If your child is a fan of Phineas & Ferb, Spy Kids, Agent Cody Banks, Mission Impossible, James Bond or Totally Spies, a spy party is sure to make your Secret Agent’s special day be the best birthday ever.

Secret Agent Birthday Party Invitations

Secret Code Invitations

Secret Code Cipher Card
Secret Code Cipher Card

These are cool party invitations that are easy to make yourself. First, you need to create a secret code. The easiest way to do this is with a font like Wingdings. Type every letter of the alphabet, then change the font to Wingdings or another symbol font. Type the regular alphabet underneath your “coded” alphabet. This gives you a “Cipher Card” that you can use to read or write in code.

Download a sheet of Cipher Cards formatted to print on business card paper. (.doc)

The next step is to create the invitation, putting certain words into code – just use the Wingdings font to type them.  Send each guest the invitation and a cipher card so they can translate the coded words. The cipher cards can also be used for the Secret Code party game (see below in the Games & Activities section).

Try out this text for your invitations, putting the words in [brackets] into your font code:

Attention all secret agents: Your presence is requested for a top secret mission. There is a [birthday party] for Agent 0025. Password for entry is [password]. Use the cipher card to decode secret words. See full mission details on the other side of this document.

Print the party details on the reverse side – child’s name, party date, location, etc. Add an official looking seal or logo to finish it off. The example below shows the CIA seal. You can learn more about the CIA seal it on the CIA website.

Sample spy party invitation:

Secret agent invitation - front
Secret agent invitation - back
 

You can mark your invitations “Top Secret” with a “top secret” rubber stamp. For delivery, you can put the invitations in forensics evidence bags and seal them with evidence box sealing tape
.

Top Secret Stamp


Mark invitations as Top Secret with this Top Secret Self-Inking Rubber Stamp.

Spy Party Decorations

HQ

Set up the party room as “Headquarters” or “Top Secret Base” – post a sign on the door. Be sure to add some “Authorized Personnel Only” signs, too.

Retina Scan

Get a small cardboard box. Cut a hole – about eye-size – on one side. Place a mini-flashlight inside, pointing up so it illuminates the hole without blinding anyone. Set up the box child-level outside the party room, with a sign that says “Retina Scanner”.  Partygoers have to pass the eye scan before entering. You can add a small pad for a pretend thumbprint scan, too.

Crime Scene

Place crime scene tape strategically around the party area.

Chalk Outline

Add a chalk-outlined victim to the sidewalk or driveway outside if you’re having the party at home. If you don’t want “bodies” laying around, try chalk shoeprints leading up to the door instead.

The Perfect Disguise

Get fun secret agent disguises

Police Lights

Police lights make great party decorations and are reasonably priced, too.

Secret Agent Music

Create a playlist of all the best secret agent music and play it during the party.

Spy Party Tableware

Silver cups for a secret agent spy party


Black tableware is a great choice for your spy party – mysterious and sophisticated, just like all the best secret agents! Try black plates with silver cups and napkins for a hi-tech look.

Party Food and Snacks

For those sophisticated kids who prefer their party beverages shaken, not stirred, try serving Shirley Temples in plastic martini glasses. For those who don’t know, Shirley Temples are non-alcoholic drinks made with either ginger ale or lemon lime soda like 7 Up, and grenadine. You don’t have to call them Shirley Temples – not a terribly cool name for a secret agent drink! Call them whatever you like, add a couple of cherries to a plastic sword, and you’ll have the most sophisticated spies around.

Spy Gear

Secret Agent Birthday Cakes

Bomb Cake

For your spy-themed birthday party, bake a cake that’s really ‘the bomb!’ This cake is easy to do; you just need a sports ball cake pan.

Follow the directions for the pan, then frost black. You can add black paste food coloring to chocolate frosting for a good, true black. If you don’t want to have black frosting – it does color your teeth – you can also frost with chocolate frosting.

The cake in the picture has black licorice added to the top to make the base for the fuse. Tall, slender candles make the fuse. You can also use a sparkler for a fuse, but be safe and keep in mind that you can’t blow it out like you can candles.

Bomb Cake Pan

Make a bomb cake for your spy party with this sports ball cake pan.

Bomb cake for spy party

Secret Agent Party Games and Activities

Secret Agent ID Cards

Make an ID card with space for important information – name, code name, specialties, etc which you can print up for each child. Let them fill in the blanks when they get there. You can leave space for a photo, then take one with a digital camera as the guests arrive, print them off, and put them on the cards. An easy way to do this is to print the pictures on sticker paper, then just cut them out and stick them to the card. If you create business card-sized ID cards, you can print them on business card paper, which separates easily – no cutting!

Fingerprinting

Have your Secret Agents take turns fingerprinting each other. Just for fun, do it on an FBI fingerprint card, which you can get here:

https://www.fbi.gov/file-repository/standard-fingerprint-form-fd-258-1.pdf/view

Be aware that fingerprinting can be messy! Use inkless fingerprint pads which are much less messy than traditional ink pads, and require a lot less clean up. Practice fingerprinting before the party, so you know how much ink to use and how to roll the fingers to get a nice, clear print.

Defuse the Bomb

Take either the goody bags or prizes and tie a long piece of yarn to each one. String the pieces of yarn across the room, going over, under, and around the other pieces of yarn – as well as any furniture you’d like to include in this crazy maze. Leave the ends of the yarn available for the party guests.

Each guest takes an end and has to follow their ‘wire’ all the way to the other end to ‘defuse the bomb’ and collect their prize. This game can get a little crazy, but kids love it. It also works well as an outdoor game.

Secret Mission

All spies need a mission! Send partygoers on a quest to locate their goody bags or other prizes. Give each guest a pencil and paper and a Cipher Card. Instructions for the Cipher Cards & Secret Code are in the Invitation area of this page.

Before the party, you need to create a series of small cards with instructions written in code. The instructions are actually the names of locations where you have hidden other instruction cards with additional locations.

The first card gives a location to look for the hidden items (under a chair, on the bookcase, etc). They have to decode the message using the cipher cards to find the location.

When they arrive at the location, there is another card waiting for them. The second card has further instructions (under the couch, or whatever you like).

Send them to 4 or 5 places – how many you choose should depend on the age/attention span of party guests. Eventually the clues lead them to the final location of the prize.

Obstacle Course

Everyone knows that Secret Agents must be in top physical condition. Send your junior spies on a mission that will test their strength and stamina with an obstacle course.

Outdoor obstacle courses can include balance beams (2×4 laid on the ground), water hazards (wading pools) – whatever you can think of. Keep them safe, and consider the age of party guests when creating obstacles.

Indoor obstacle courses are fun, too. A blanket laid over two chairs has amused kids for generations! You can include a mini trampoline, tunnels of cardboard boxes – whatever you can fit into the space available.

Consider giving certificates after completing the obstacle course, saying they completed their spy training.

Pinata

For a great spy party pinata, get a bomb. Not a real bomb, of course, but a pinata that looks like one of those old cartoon bombs. Bomb pinatas are not easy to find, so what you need is a round pinata – like a baseball pinata – and spray paint it black. For a little added flair, you can glue a piece of string or a wire to the top for a fuse, and paint a nuclear symbol on the side. Now let your secret agents put it out of commission!

Are pinatas a good idea at a kid’s birthday party?

Spy Briefcase

Any secret agent would love to have this shiny silver briefcase with combination lock!

Musical Chairs

Play a game of musical chairs using spy music.

Spy Party Favors

Spy Party Favor Kit

Get favors for 12 – Invisible ink pens, notepads, and magnifying glasses – for a very affordable price with this spy party favor kit.

Police Badge

Your secret agents will love carrying around a badge. These special police badges come with a chain and belt clip.

Handcuffs

Make catching the bad guys easy with these metal handcuffs.

metal handcuff party favors

Sunglasses

Spies need disguises, and sunglasses make a quick and easy disguise. You can choose from traditional spy sunglasses or try these rearview spy sunglasses that let you see behind you.

Top Secret Favor Box

Get these Top Secret briefcase party favor boxes to put your party favors in.

Mustaches

Your little spies will be nearly unrecognizable when they’re wearing fake mustaches! The really great thing about fake mustaches – other than how they make you look amazing – is that everyone loves them: boys, girls, kids and adults. Be sure to get extras!

Evidence Bags

Forgo the usual goody bags; instead put party favors into a big manila office envelope or forensics evidence bags and mark the outside ‘Top Secret’, ‘Confidential’, or ‘For Your Eyes Only’.

Squirt Guns

Kids will have a blast playing with squirt guns at an outdoor party. Have an indoor party? Put them in favor bags so kids can play with them at home.

Magnifying Glasses

Junior detectives will have no problem finding clues with a magnifying glass.

Toy Binoculars

Let your spies track down the bad guys with their own set of binoculars.

Secret codes, high security, everyone knows the password to fun is ‘spy party’!

Camping / Campout Party

Camping is a favorite tradition of many families. Make camping out even more fun with a camping themed birthday party. You can set up a tent in the yard or have a camp-in the the living room. Either way, your child will love a camping birthday party with friends!

Camping party supplies

Get everything you need for a fun camping party with this camping party kit.

Camping Party Invitations


Fill-in-the-blank invitations are quick and easy, and Amazon has some great choices for camping party invitations.

Free camping party invitation to printMake your own party invitations

Looking for a party invitation you can make yourself? Download this free camping party invitation, then print it on colored paper. Add your party details to the inside and you have a super easy and free camping party invitation.

Camping Party Decorations

Turn your home into the great outdoors! Move any house plants you have into the party room. Decorate with vines (made by twisting green streamers) along with plastic bugs and toy snakes. Use stuffed animals to for wildlife.

You can also set camping gear out in the room – backpacks, sleeping bags, lanterns, etc. Set the mood with a campfire in your living room (see below).

Make an artificial campfire

Things you need:

How to make it:

  • Cut cellophane into triangles to make flames
  • Arrange rocks in a circle for a firepit
  • Tape some of the flames to the fan
  • Put fan in the center of the firepit
  • Arrange lights around the fan
  • Arrange sticks or logs in a teepee shape over the fan and the lights
  • Tape the rest of the flames to the underside of the logs
  • Turn on the lights to make your fire glow
  • Turn on the fan to make your flames flicker

Camping Party Food and Snacks

Camping-style food is easy to make for a party. Go with hot dogs, chips and dip, potato salad, baked beans and lemonade. These are really easy to make up for a large group.

As a special treat, let the kids have smores. They’re easy to make in the microwave if you’re having an indoor party.

Indoor/Outdoor S’mores Maker

Camping Birthday Cakes

Camping in the Woods Cake

Bake a regular sheet cake, then decorate it with camping items for a 3 dimensional look:

  • Tent
    Put 2 graham crackers together to make a tent. Frost them if you like. Or, use Hershey bars for this.
  • Sleeping bags
    Fruit rollups rolled up make great sleeping bags. You can also roll one out inside your “tent”
  • Campfire
    Use pretzel sticks or Tootsie Rolls for logs and candy corn for flames. You can also use the birthday candles for real flames.
  • Pine trees
    Upside down sugar cones coated in green frosting
  • Rocks
    Add a few jellybean rocks around the campsite

Camping Cake Kit

Need a quick and easy camping party cake? Try this Camping Cake Kit with Light up Tent.

Camping Party Games and Activities

Hide & Seek
This is a fun outdoor game if you’ve got the space. You can play it indoors, but it can be chaotic during a party.

Frisbee
Fun at outdoor parties. Make sure you have enough space and keep the throwing area clear of passersby!

Bubbles
Kids love bubbles. They are easy, affordable, and fun!

Scavenger Hunt
Hide items around the house or outside and have kids find them. For younger kids or a party with guests of all ages, this works best if you give them a list of what to find. You can incude a picture of the item, too. Then each person finds one of each item, ensuring that younger guests aren’t left out.

For camping party scavenger hunts, hide plastic bugs and toy snakes, or other fun items that represent the great outdoors.

Obstacle Course
This is best for an outdoor party, though you can do a mini version inside. Be creative – use boxes, create tunnels, give them things to run around while they explore the “wilderness”.

Find the Wild Animals
This game works outside or indoors. Set stuffed animals around the area where they may not be easy to notice, but can be spotted. Give each guest a list of the animals (include a picture for small children), a pencil to mark items off, and a pair of binoculars. Let them try to find – but not disturb – each animal.

Camping Party Favors

Mini Uno cards party favorUno
Uno is a favorite game on many family campouts. Send camping party guests home with their own mini deck of Uno cards.

Flashlights
All campers need flashlights. Give them as party favors that guests can enjoy during the party.

Creepy Crawlies
Plastic bugs and toy snakes are always fun for kids, and they are affordable for you!

Binoculars
You can use toy binoculars in party games, then send them home with guests after the party.

Keychain compass party favorCompasses
Small compasses on a carabiner clip are a fun party favor for a camping party. Kids can clip them to backpacks or beltloops before they head out on their next adventure.

Bracelets
Kids love Silly Bandz style bracelets, and these Zany Bandz Camp Wig Wam Bracelets come in fun camping shapes.

Whether you set up a tent in the yard or have a camp-in in the living room, your child will love a camping birthday party with friends.