You want to celebrate your friend without making grown adults guess baby food flavors. Traditional shower games make everyone uncomfortable, and you end up forcing smiles while someone measures bellies with toilet paper. I sat through enough awkward games at my kids’ showers to know there’s a better way.
Give guests something meaningful instead. Set up a Diaper Message Station where they write 3 a.m. encouragement, create an Advice Card Library she’ll actually revisit, or let everyone decorate onesies the baby will wear. These nineteen activities keep hands busy, conversations flowing, and nobody has to pin a clothespin to their shirt.
1. Onesie Decorating Station
Set up a table with plain white onesies (around $3 each for a 5-pack at Target), fabric markers, and iron-on transfers. Guests create custom outfits the baby can actually wear, and you end up with a wardrobe full of personality instead of another generic yellow duck outfit. The whole setup runs under $25 for markers and onesies combined, and takes about 10 minutes to arrange. This doubles as entertainment and practical gifts mom will love using. Keep baby wipes nearby for marker mishaps on hands.
2. Advice Card Library
For those moments between mingling when guests need something to do, printed advice cards give them purpose without awkward forced participation. I picked up a pack of 50 cards at Target for around $8, and guests fill them out throughout the shower at their own pace. Mom gets a collection of midnight-feeding wisdom she can actually reference at 3 a.m. when the baby won’t sleep. Set them on a side table with nice pens so people can contribute whenever inspiration strikes.
3. Diaper Message Station
Your cluttered changing table becomes less depressing with funny messages written on diapers. Grab a box of size 1 diapers (about $10) and set out Sharpies for guests to write encouragement or jokes on the back. During those 2 a.m. changes, mom gets a laugh reading “You’ve got this!” or “Better you than me!” This takes 5 minutes to set up and costs around $10 for the diapers she needs anyway. Stack decorated diapers in a basket as a functional centerpiece.
4. Baby Book Signing Station
When the baby shower winds down, and everyone’s searching for something meaningful to say, a baby book gives them direction. Set up the book (around $15-20 at Target or Amazon) with sticky notes marking pages for different people to sign. Grandparents write on the family tree page, friends claim the “people who love you” section, and everyone leaves something permanent. This beats a guest book that gets shoved in a drawer. Leave it open to the first page with a sign explaining which sections are available.
5. Flower Arranging Bar
Fifteen minutes and about $30 in grocery store flowers get you an activity people actually want to do. Buy 3-4 bunches of mixed flowers, set out mason jars or small vases (Dollar Tree has them for $1.25 each), and let guests create arrangements to take home. They get a party favor they chose themselves, and you avoid the usual prizes nobody wants. The flowers double as your shower decoration before guests arrange them. Have kitchen shears and a trash bag handy for trimming stems.
6. Time Capsule Letters
This becomes priceless when the child is old enough to read what Aunt Sarah thought about them before birth. Set out nice stationery (about $5-8 for a pack) and ask guests to write letters the child will open on their 18th birthday. Mom seals them in a decorated box, and the baby gets a collection of predictions, hopes, and embarrassing stories from people who knew them before day one. You’ll spend almost nothing but create something irreplaceable. Provide envelopes so letters stay private until the big reveal.
7. Nursery Art Creation
For those guests who claim they can’t draw, abstract art is wonderfully forgiving. Set up canvases (around $1.25 each at Dollar Tree for small ones), acrylic paints, and brushes for about $15 total. Guests create paintings in the nursery color scheme, and mom gets custom wall art that costs less than one store-bought print. This works best with 3-4 canvases so multiple people can paint at once. Protect your table with a plastic tablecloth and have paper towels ready.
8. Recipe Card Collection
Provide blank recipe cards (about $3-4 for a pack) and ask guests to write their go-to easy dinners, especially one-handed meals for those early weeks. Mom builds a recipe box of tried-and-true dishes from people who know her taste. This takes 30 seconds to set up and costs almost nothing. Ask for recipes that freeze well since new parents need those most.
9. Birthday Predictions Calendar
Your guests turn into fortune tellers, guessing everything from birth weight to first word. Create a simple calendar (free printable or around $5 at Target) where people write predictions for the baby’s first year milestones. Mom keeps it as a keepsake and laughs at how wrong everyone was about when the baby would sleep through the night. This requires zero setup beyond printing or buying the calendar. Have it on a clipboard so people can fill it out while standing.
10. Baby’s First Library
Skip the guesswork of individual gift-buying by setting up a book station where each guest brings one children’s book with an inscription inside the cover. The baby gets a library full of classics and new favorites, plus messages from everyone who loved them first. This costs guests around $5-10 per book and gives mom something she’ll use daily. Display the books on a shelf as decoration during the shower.
11. Wish Bracelet Making
Set up a station with embroidery floss (around $3-5 for multiple colors), beads, and simple instructions for making wish bracelets. Each guest makes one for themselves and ties it on another guest, making a wish for the baby. The setup costs under $15 total and takes about 5 minutes. These bracelets are prettier than typical shower favors and people wear them home. This works as both an activity and a party favor.
12. Memory Jar Station
For days when the house smells like yesterday’s diapers, and mom questions everything, this jar reminds her why she’s doing it. Set out a large jar (around $3-5), colored paper, and pens for guests to write their favorite memories with mom or hopes for her as a parent. She can read these during hard moments and remember she’s not alone. The whole thing comes in under $10 and takes 2 minutes to arrange. Use pretty paper that matches your shower colors.
13. Baby Mad Libs
I didn’t believe this would work until I watched grown adults laugh until they cried over ridiculous birth stories. Print free baby-themed Mad Libs online or buy a book for around $6-8, and let guests fill them out in groups. Mom gets a collection of absurd stories about her future parenting adventures. This requires zero craft supplies and works perfectly for guests who arrive early. Keep completed ones in a folder as a keepsake for rough days.
14. Nursery Playlist Building
Music creation saves any shower when traditional activities fall flat. Set up a station with a poster board or digital playlist where guests write song suggestions for the nursery. Mom gets a soundtrack of lullabies, dance party songs, and the random tracks that remind people of her. This costs nothing if done digitally or around $2-3 for a poster board. Include categories like “songs for midnight crying” and “songs for tummy time.”
15. Growth Chart Signing
A blank canvas growth chart from Amazon or Target totals about $20 and becomes a keepsake guests want to sign. Set it up with fabric markers and let guests sign and decorate around the measurements. The baby grows up seeing signatures from everyone who celebrated their arrival. This doubles as nursery decor and a permanent record of the shower. Have guests write their relationship to the baby next to their signature so the child knows who everyone was.
16. Freezer Meal Prep Station
Fifteen minutes gets you weeks of postpartum dinners when you organize this right. Ask 3-4 guests to come 30 minutes early and help assemble freezer meals in disposable pans. The ingredients come to $50-75 total, split between helpers, and mom gets 8-10 ready-to-bake dinners. This works better than a meal train because everything’s done at once. Label each pan with cooking instructions and contents before freezing. I appreciated this more than any other shower activity after our kids were born because it gave us meals during those exhausting first weeks.
17. Baby Headband Bar
This station lets guests play fashion designer for under $15 total. Buy plain elastic headbands (around $1.25 each at Dollar Tree), felt flowers, ribbon, and hot glue. Guests create custom headbands the baby can wear, and you end up with accessories that cost a fraction of boutique prices. Set up a sample headband so people see what’s possible. Keep the hot glue gun on low and provide a protective mat underneath.
18. Welcome Sign Creation
Your front door becomes photo-worthy with a personalized hospital door sign guests design together. Buy a wooden sign blank (around $5-8 at craft stores), paint markers, and stickers. Different guests write the baby’s name, add decorations, or include the due date. Mom uses it for hospital photos and nursery decor afterwards. This takes 10 minutes to set up and costs under $15. Seal it with clear spray once dry so decorations don’t smudge.
19. Monthly Milestone Cards
Print blank monthly milestone card templates (free online) on cardstock, and let guests decorate one month each with stickers, markers, and embellishments. The supplies run about $10-15 total, and mom gets custom photo props for the entire first year. Each guest claims a month, so everyone contributes something. Laminate them afterwards if you want them to last through messy baby hands.
Your Shower Just Got Better
You’ve sat through enough belly-measuring disasters. You know that forced enthusiasm over melted chocolate bars in diapers doesn’t create the warm celebration your friend deserves. These activities give guests something meaningful to do while she builds a collection of keepsakes worth keeping.
Set up the Diaper Message Station if you want practical magic she’ll treasure during those exhausting newborn nights, add the Advice Card Library if she needs wisdom she’ll return to for years, or try the Time Capsule Letters when you want to give her something she’ll cry over in the best way. Pick two or three activities that fit your space and the number of guests. You’re creating a real connection without making anyone uncomfortable, and that’s exactly what a baby shower should be.
