[April Crafts] Useful for childcare! Spring craft ideas for 1-year-olds
Warm spring is a fun season for children, too! Here, we’re sharing craft ideas you can enjoy together with one-year-olds.
Tearing and sticking to make colorful flowers helps develop fine motor skills! For parts that are hard for one-year-olds, have an adult join in and get creative.
If you decorate with lots of colors, you’re sure to see big smiles from the kids! While exploring colors and shapes, they can really feel the spring season.
Let’s all make things together and create lots of wonderful pieces! Get excited and make new spring memories.
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[April Crafts] Useful for childcare! Spring craft ideas for 1-year-olds (51–60)
Spring Stroll Bag
Introducing a handmade walk bag for storing the treasures you find on your strolls.
Prepare a zippered storage bag, round stickers and washi tape, raffia tape (suzuran tape), felt-tip pens, and cloth duct tape.
Stick a strip of duct tape with the child’s name on the front of the storage bag in a visible spot.
Decorate the surface of the bag freely with round stickers and washi tape.
Reinforce the upper left and right edges of the bag by sandwiching them with duct tape, then use a hole punch to make holes.
Braid the raffia tape to a length that fits over the children’s shoulders, thread it through the holes in the bag, and you’re done.
A bed for Little Broad Bean made of cotton
Let’s enjoy the world of picture books! Here’s an idea for making Soramame-kun’s bed out of cotton.
You’ll need construction paper cut into the shape of a pod, cotton, glue or double-sided tape, and a Soramame-kun made from construction paper.
Miwa Nakaya’s “Soramame-kun no Beddo” is a beloved picture book for both children and adults.
How about making the bed that appears in the story? Spread out the fluffy cotton and stick it onto the paper.
It would also be fun to have the kids draw Soramame-kun’s facial expressions!
Rapeseed blossoms made with cotton swab stamps
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Speaking of spring, the bright yellow fields of canola flowers are so beautiful, aren’t they? Here’s a craft featuring canola blossoms that even one-year-olds can enjoy.
Prepare construction paper, paint, and five cotton swabs, and let’s get started.
First, make the base for the canola blossoms and stems using construction paper.
Bundle the five cotton swabs with a rubber band to create a stamp for the flower portion.
Dip the bundled swabs, thinned with a little water, into yellow paint and stamp the flower area.
The slightly raised paint texture looks so delicate and really brings out the canola-flower feel.
It’s also fun to change the paint and paper colors to create your own original canola blossoms.
Dandelions made from tissue paper
Soft and gentle vibes that are so cute! Here’s an idea for making dandelions with tissue paper.
You’ll need yellow tissue paper cut into quarter-size pieces, a round backing sheet, a stapler, and scissors.
First, accordion-fold the tissue paper and staple it in the middle.
Next, make three snips on both sides with scissors, then gently open up the tissue paper.
If you cut a bit deeper, it looks even cuter! Finally, glue the tissue paper onto the round backing to finish.
Try combining it with leaves and a stem made from construction paper.
Strawberries made with torn-paper collage

Let’s create using our fingertips! Here are some ideas for making strawberries with torn-paper collage.
You’ll need red origami paper, patterned origami paper, a backing sheet, glue or double-sided tape, scissors, flower-shaped cut paper, and strawberry calyx-shaped cut paper.
Use your fingertips to boldly tear the origami! It’s fun that the sound changes depending on how fast you tear.
Even things that seem obvious to adults can deepen the activity when you enjoy children’s discoveries as you work together.
Paste the torn pieces onto the backing sheet, then have a caregiver or teacher cut the sheet into a strawberry shape with scissors to finish.
It’s also great if the children can glue on the strawberry calyx themselves.



