Arts and crafts programs for kids in Illinois split between park district classes (structured, multi-week, building skills like drawing or pottery), library workshops (drop-in, often free, themed around picture books or seasons), and private studios (focused on a specific medium — clay, painting, mixed media). Park districts usually run 6-week sessions tied to school terms; libraries run single-session workshops you can take on a whim. Both work well for kids who want to explore. If your kid is showing real interest, a private studio with kiln access (for ceramics) or a year-long structured drawing program is the next step. Open studio time at libraries and community centers is underused and worth knowing about — usually free or low-cost, supplies provided.
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 15 – Jun 18
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 15 – Jun 18
MO, TU, WE, TH
Pioneer · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 15 – Aug 3
MO 10:15–11:00
Historical Museum · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 15 – Jun 19
MO, TU, WE, TH, FR 13:00–16:00
Pioneer · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 16 – Aug 4
TU 15:15–16:00
Pioneer · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 16 – Aug 4
TU 09:15–10:00
Pioneer · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 19 – Aug 7
FR 10:15–11:00
Pioneer · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 19 – Aug 7
FR 09:15–10:00
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jun 29 – Jul 2
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 6 – Jul 9
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 13 – Jul 16
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Heritage Tennis Club · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 13 – Jul 16
MO, TU, WE, TH
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 20 – Jul 23
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Heritage Tennis Club · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 20 – Jul 23
MO, TU, WE, TH
Hasbrook · Arlington Heights, IL
Jul 27 – Jul 30
MO, TU, WE, TH 13:00–16:00
Heritage Tennis Club · Arlington Heights, IL
Aug 3 – Aug 6
MO, TU, WE, TH
Frontier · Arlington Heights, IL
Aug 3 – Aug 6
MO, TU, WE, TH
Library story-and-craft programs start around age 2-3. Park district classes typically begin at 4-5 with classes that focus on basic skills (cutting, gluing, simple painting). Real medium-specific programs (drawing, clay, watercolor) usually start at 7-8.
Yes — most public libraries run free craft programs weekly or biweekly, sometimes themed around picture-book read-alouds. Library STEM kits often include art supplies. Quality is real, even if the marketing is quiet.
Look for a private studio with a kiln. Park districts occasionally run pottery as a special-session class but rarely have dedicated kilns. If your district has a community arts center, that's the most likely on-budget path.
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