Recommended for seniors! Origami gifts
How about giving origami as a gift to an older adult?
Origami makes a perfect present for Respect for the Aged Day, birthdays, and other special occasions.
Handmade gifts warm the heart and make people feel cozy inside.
For such occasions, flowers are a great choice in origami, as well as celebratory good-luck cranes.
Try making something with the recipient’s tastes in mind.
It’ll be even more appreciated if you include a message card along with the origami gift.
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Recommended for seniors! Origami gifts (61–70)
cherry blossom twig

Introducing a cherry blossom twig decoration that symbolizes spring in Japan.
Once you have pink origami paper ready, let’s make the blossoms.
Using a round dish or similar object makes it easy.
Cut out a circle, fold it in half, then fold it again so it becomes one-third the original size.
Sketch a petal shape with a pencil and cut along the line.
When you unfold it, you’ll have a cherry blossom with six petals.
Overlap one petal onto the neighboring petal to give it a three-dimensional shape.
Make a branch from brown origami paper and leaves from green origami paper, then attach them along with the blossoms to finish.
It looks adorable when added to a message card or gift box.
Give it a try!
Dandelion wreath

Spring is the season when the weather warms and many flowers begin to appear, and you’ll likely spot more dandelions as well.
This craft recreates dandelions—a quintessential spring flower—using origami and combines them into a wreath-like shape.
To make the dandelion flowers, fold a strip of origami paper in half and then fold it again to make it narrower, cut fine slits along the edge, roll it up, then spread and shape it.
The wreath base is made by assembling triangular units, and it’s recommended to use green to evoke leaves.
Finally, combine all the parts and add decorative elements like leaf pieces to complete the project.
Tulip wreath

Tulips are one of the flowers that color the spring season, and their rich variety of hues conveys the excitement of spring.
This is a wreath that captures that springtime joy by arranging colorful tulips on a circular base.
It’s recommended to make the wreath base in green to evoke leaves; create triangular pieces and insert adjacent pieces into the gaps to form a circle.
Then just add tulips and other decorations to the base to finish.
To make the tulips really stand out, it’s important to use folds to give them a three-dimensional look.
Nemophila

Nemophila, with its gentle blue blossoms and petite size, softly colors the spring season.
This project recreates nemophila flowers with origami, combining pieces to bring out their delicate charm.
Fold the paper finely toward the center to form five petals, then stack and assemble them to create the nemophila bloom.
Adding small touches—like staggering the layers during assembly or slightly bending the front edges—helps create a three-dimensional look.
Lining up flowers in different shades to make a gradient also seems like a lovely idea.
Heart pocket

Let me introduce a super-cute heart pocket perfect for holding candies and small trinkets! It’s great as a casual gift for Valentine’s Day, Christmas, or birthdays.
You can make it with just two sheets of origami paper, so give it a try! Fold the two sheets together as you go.
The key is to place the color you want to show more on the outside.
No difficult techniques are needed, so anyone can make it easily! Since it uses two layers of origami, it’s sturdier, too.
You can also have fun with variations like patterned × solid or patterned × patterned.
Sakura Japanese-style ornament

Cherry trees color Japan’s spring.
Seeing the cherry blossoms in full bloom in parks and other places gives you a sense of seasonal charm, doesn’t it? Let’s make a Japanese-style cherry blossom decoration that captures that feeling of spring.
Use three sheets of origami in different sizes, accordion-fold them, apply glue, and connect them.
Create a three-dimensional cherry blossom out of origami.
Because it’s three-dimensional, some steps are quite detailed.
Older adults who enjoy origami will likely have fun making it.
If the finer parts are difficult, people around them should lend a hand.
Assemble the cherry blossom petals and place them on the accordion-folded origami to finish.
It will look lovely displayed at home.
Wreath of daffodils and roses

Daffodils bloom until early spring, and roses bloom around late spring, so even though their seasons are offset, both can be said to be representative spring flowers.
This is a simple yet dimensional wreath with a glamorous look that combines daffodils and roses.
Another key point is that the wreath base and stem parts are kept flat, which helps emphasize the three-dimensionality of the daffodil and rose blossoms.
For each flower, it’s important to deliberately add fine creases, cuts, and bends, and to shape them carefully so that a sense of depth and volume comes through.


