[Recreation] Summary of Recommended Origami Ideas for Seniors
Origami is a seated group activity that everyone can enjoy.
Because origami uses your fingertips, it also serves as brain training and can help prevent cognitive decline.
If you don’t fold regularly, it’s easy to forget how to make certain models, isn’t it?
In this article, we’ve gathered seasonal items, animals, plants, and more—from easy folds to more advanced designs.
You can make lots of pieces to decorate the wall, or stick them onto fans and other items to create your own projects.
Why not read this article and try folding together with older adults?
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[Recreation] Summary of Recommended Origami Ideas for Seniors (131–140)
Kintaro

On Children’s Day in May, many households display Kintaro dolls.
They are put up with the wish that children will grow up kind and lively like Kintaro.
So for a May origami craft, let’s try folding Kintaro.
If you fold the face, hair, and body with separate sheets of origami paper, you can create a piece that looks just like the real Kintaro.
The folds aren’t very complicated and are simple enough that older adults may also find this project easy to do.
Adding an origami carp streamer to the finished piece or mounting it on a backing board for display will make it look wonderful.
After the rain

When the gentle rains of the rainy season stop, it lifts your spirits.
Of course, it’s also a life-giving rain, and the rainy season is an important time, so there are people who welcome it too.
How about expressing a little scene unique to June’s stretch of rainy days with origami? Here’s an origami craft inspired by the clearing after rain.
Try making a closed umbrella, hydrangeas, and teru-teru bozu.
The finished pieces will look lovely as wall decorations or mounted on a backing sheet.
Older adults can also feel the season through making these crafts, and their rainy-season stories might make for lively conversation.
Koi carp streamers leaping

When you think of koinobori, many of you probably picture them swimming energetically across the sky.
This time, we’ll introduce an origami koinobori craft with a lively, dynamic look.
You’ll make the body and head using two sheets of origami paper.
The finished piece looks as if it’s leaping, just like a real koinobori.
Using patterned paper enhances the koinobori’s feel even more.
For older adults, making koinobori may bring back memories of Children’s Day and the Boys’ Festival.
Once finished, you can attach a stick to make a tabletop koinobori, or paste it onto a wreath for display—there are many ways to enjoy your creation.
Koinobori and wisteria flowers

Wisteria flowers reach their best viewing time from the end of April.
You may have opportunities to go see them with older adults.
Some seniors might look forward to the purple wisteria trellises every year.
Here, we introduce wisteria—the flower that represents May—and carp streamers (koinobori) decorations.
We’ll make wisteria and koinobori out of origami.
There are some steps with fine folds, so seniors who enjoy origami are likely to have fun with this craft.
Once the wisteria and koinobori are finished, attach them to a paper plate.
If you paste a sheet with a sky pattern in the center of the plate, it will look like the koinobori are swimming in the sky.
Cutting out the center of the paper plate to make it into a wreath shape is also lovely.
Koinobori chopstick sleeve

To help seniors feel the seasons, some senior and nursing care facilities offer special seasonal meals, don’t they? In those moments, we’d like to introduce a carp streamer–themed chopstick sleeve that’s lovely to set quietly on the table.
Let’s fold a chopstick sleeve using origami.
If you use gold or red origami paper for the sleeve, you’ll end up with a festive design perfect for celebratory occasions.
Attach a carp streamer made from origami to the sleeve as well.
As you fold, some seniors may recall past Boys’ Day (Tango no Sekku) celebrations.
Besides carp streamers, you can also attach other seasonal decorations to the sleeve so it can be used throughout the year.
Please try arranging and customizing your own version.
Carp streamer wall decoration

Why not try making a seasonal carp streamer (koinobori) wall decoration? Using paper cups adds a nice bit of three-dimensionality.
First, cut a paper cup into four equal sections to make the koinobori body.
Wrap origami paper around the cup pieces to create the scales and glue it in place.
Add eye stickers to finish the fish.
Fold a samurai helmet (kabuto), a pinwheel, and irises (shobu) as well.
Assemble everything and glue it onto a backing sheet.
If you make a set of decorations for the whole year and swap them out, it brings a pleasant change to everyday life.
A basket of daisies
Daisies are striking for the way they bloom in a variety of colors, and their colorful appearance really conveys the exhilaration of spring.
This craft features a basket filled with daisy flowers, appealing for its colorful and playful look.
The key is how to make the daisies: fold a strip of origami paper in half, make slits, then roll it up and finally shape it into a flower.
As you carefully spread out the petals, the daisy becomes three-dimensional.
By varying the size and how much you spread the petals, and arranging a range of colors, you can achieve an even more vibrant result.



