That pastel bunny sweater is adorable in theory—until your three-month-old spits up on it mid-photo and you realize you packed zero backup options. First Easter with a new baby comes with enough chaos without adding outfit panic to the mix.
The good news? Dressing your littlest one for Easter doesn't require a Pinterest-perfect vision board or seventeen outfit changes. A few smart choices and you'll have photos worth framing and a baby who's actually comfortable through brunch, egg hunts, and all the grandparent snuggles.
Babies don't care about holiday aesthetics. They care about soft fabric, easy diaper access, and not overheating in that adorable cable-knit cardigan you found online. Building an Easter outfit around comfort first means everyone has a better day—including you.
For newborns through six months, a romper or onesie in a springy color does most of the work. Think soft lavender, butter yellow, mint green, or classic blush pink. Add a single statement piece—a tutu, a headband with bunny ears, a embroidered bib—and you've got a complete look without wrestling a fussy baby into multiple layers.
Older babies who are sitting up or starting to crawl need outfits that move with them. Stretchy fabrics and snap closures become your best friends. A "SOME BUNNY LOVES ME" sweatshirt with soft leggings photographs just as well as a stiff dress, and your baby can actually grab for those plastic eggs without restriction.
One outfit is a wish. Two outfits is a plan.
Pack a second complete look—not just a spare onesie, but another photo-worthy option. Blowouts happen. Drool happens. That jar of sweet potatoes at brunch definitely happens. Having a backup means one mess doesn't derail your whole Easter photo situation.
Your backup doesn't need to be as elaborate as outfit number one. A coordinating romper or a simple bodysuit in a complementary color works perfectly. The goal is something clean and cute, not necessarily a complete costume change.
Pro move: Keep the backup in the car or diaper bag in a gallon ziplock. You'll thank yourself at 11 AM when the first outfit meets its end via mysterious purple stain.
Easter 2026 could be 45 degrees and rainy or 70 and sunny depending on where you are—sometimes both in the same afternoon. Layers let you adapt without sacrificing the look you planned.
A lightweight cardigan or jacket over a romper gives you options. Too warm at the outdoor egg hunt? Cardigan comes off, romper still looks put-together. Chilly during photos? Layer back on. Everyone stays comfortable, no one misses the shot.
For outdoor celebrations, consider a simple sunhat or bonnet that does double duty—sun protection plus instant Easter charm. Just make sure baby has worn it before the big day so you're not dealing with a hat-removal meltdown during family portraits.
Pastels are classic Easter, but they're not mandatory. Plenty of babies look incredible in brighter spring tones—coral, turquoise, sunny yellow, or even a bold floral print. White with colorful embroidery or appliqué photographs beautifully and stands out in group family shots where everyone else went full pastel.
If you're coordinating with siblings, consider complementary colors rather than exact matches. A big sister in a lavender "SOME BUNNY'S BIG SIS" tee while baby wears mint creates visual interest without looking costumey. The photos feel intentional but not overly staged.
Gold and silver accents—sparkly tutus, metallic headbands, shimmery details—add celebration without committing to a specific color scheme. They coordinate with almost everything and photograph with that little extra magic.
Babies have about a 20-minute window of peak cooperation on any given day. Knowing when that window typically falls for your baby—and protecting it fiercely—matters more than perfect lighting or location.
Get baby fed, changed, and rested before putting on the special outfit. Trying to capture photos when hunger or tiredness is creeping in rarely ends well for anyone's stress levels.
If you're doing a dedicated Easter photo session at home, morning light near a window works beautifully. Grab your shots before heading out for the day's activities. That way, even if the outfit doesn't survive brunch, you've already got the memories captured.
First holiday outfits can feel pressure-filled—you want something special, but spending a lot on a one-wear piece stings. The sweet spot? Pieces that work beyond Easter Sunday.
A romper or bodysuit with a springtime phrase or bunny motif gets worn to playdates, casual photos, and lazy weekends all season long. A tutu in a versatile color becomes dress-up staple. A soft sweatshirt with embroidered details layers into regular rotation.
Statement pieces—the sparkly headband, the "MY FIRST EASTER" bib—can be one-day wonders since they cost less and pack maximum photo impact. But the base outfit? Choose something you'd happily dress baby in again next Tuesday.
Stiff fabrics that don't allow movement. Elaborate headpieces that won't stay on for more than eight seconds. Shoes on non-walking babies (they just fall off and get lost). Anything requiring ironing right before you leave the house.
Keep it simple. Keep it soft. Keep it joyful.
Make Everyday A Party Worth Celebrating!
Sweet Wink is a kids clothing brand run by a mother–daughter duo, inspired by the belief that every day is a party worth celebrating.
Oceanside, New York
View full profile