Easy DIY! Introducing educational toys that can be easily made with 100-yen shop items and things around the house.
You want to provide toys that match your child’s development and changing interests, but buying new ones every time can get expensive, right?
If that sounds familiar, this is for you.
Here are some easy, handmade toy ideas you can try.
They use items from 100-yen shops and materials you likely already have at home, so they’re low-cost and beginner-friendly—another great bonus!
We’re focusing on how to make educational toys that build concentration, imagination, and fine motor skills.
Try incorporating them into playtime at home, as well as in daycare or kindergarten!
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Easy DIY! Educational toys you can make effortlessly with 100-yen store items and things around the house (11–20)
Tracing with an ice cream stick
Here’s a unique toy idea that makes tracing fun.
This time, we’ll use popsicle sticks.
Paint them in bright colors like red and yellow to catch children’s interest.
It also sounds fun to paint them together with the kids in their favorite colors.
Arrange and glue the popsicle sticks into any shapes you like on a sheet of paper cut to fit a ziplock bag, then slip it into the bag—and you’re done in no time! Use whiteboard markers to enjoy tracing right on top of the ziplock.
They wipe off easily, so you can use it over and over, which is a great plus! It’s also recommended to expand the play by drawing pictures or adding stickers to the paper where you stick the popsicle sticks.
Try creating various patterns and adjust the difficulty according to the child’s development and age.
Stacking daruma with empty bottles
Introducing a Daruma-stacking toy that’s sure to spark kids’ curiosity with a “What’s this?” First, cut the top part of an empty container to about 6 cm, and attach a strong magnet to the back of each cap.
Next, decorate the container colorfully with vinyl tape.
Finally, attach a strong magnet to the tip of a disposable chopstick, then wrap it with vinyl tape—and you’re done! When attaching the magnets, be sure to align the N and S poles correctly.
It’s a toy that might get kids hooked on the satisfying click of the bottle sticking to the chopstick.
Besides Daruma, it could be fun to customize it into animals, characters, or anything else kids love.
Hatena Box
Let’s make a fun toy that looks like it could be in a Mario game! Keep the lid of a formula can open, and attach a drain cover that fits the opening by flipping it upside down over the top.
Since your baby will be putting their hand through it, be sure to use a soft silicone drain cover.
Draw a question mark on the surface of the can and decorate it however you like—that’s it! Put small toys or snacks inside and have your baby guess what’s in there, or let them pull out cards that match a sample picture.
Because they can’t see the contents, it helps develop your baby’s imagination.
rolling toy

We’ll make a fun toy that you can roll around using a cardboard core from packing tape.
Decorate the inside of the core with illustrated paper, stickers, or anything you like.
For both ends, use lids from empty plastic containers as caps; before sealing them, add items that make sounds or look fun when rolled—like beads, bells, or pom-poms.
Wrap the outside with colored tape.
Making a few variations will make it even more enjoyable!
smart ball

You can make a smart ball game, a timeless favorite at festivals, using only items from the 100-yen shop: perforated board, square dowels, rubber bands, marbles, nails, double-sided tape, wooden dowels, and wood glue.
First, cut the lumber with a saw to fit the board and build a frame.
Attach the frame and the plunger with nails and a hammer, and fix a plastic sheet with double-sided tape to create the arch that rebounds the marbles.
Since the perforated board lets you place dowels freely, kids can have fun customizing and adding their own ideas!


