Let's make New Year’s decorations by hand! A collection of ideas you can create with everyday materials.
As the New Year approaches, are you thinking about brightening up your space with handmade New Year’s decorations? Store-bought pieces are lovely, but decorations you craft yourself carry a special warmth and sense of attachment.
In this article, we’ll share easy, DIY New Year’s decoration ideas you can try using familiar materials.
From yarn and felt to origami paper, you can create a wide variety of projects with items that are easy to find.
Try making them with your children, or finish them with your own favorite designs for decorations full of originality.
How about preparing for the New Year with heartfelt, handmade items?
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Let’s make our own New Year’s decorations! A collection of ideas using everyday materials (21–30)
Perfect for New Year’s! Origami chopstick holders

Let’s make chopstick sleeves perfect for New Year’s using Japanese-patterned paper and gold origami.
Fold the gold origami in half twice to make a triangle, then trim about 1 cm off the base.
Unfold the downsized gold paper and layer it on top of the Japanese-patterned origami, placing the white side facing up.
From here, the real folding begins.
First, fold all four corners toward the center, then flip the paper over.
Next, fold the top and bottom edges as if making thirds so they overlap, and tuck the corner of the overlapped top section into the gap of the lower triangle.
This will securely lock the tri-fold in place.
Your chopstick sleeve is now complete—slide your chopsticks into the opening of the tri-fold and enjoy!
For the New Year! Origami Kadomatsu

Let’s make a kadomatsu—an essential New Year’s decoration—out of origami.
We’ll make three parts: bamboo, a fan, and plum blossoms.
The bamboo starts with steps similar to making a “trick boat.” After folding each left/right and top/bottom edge to the center in sequence to form a square, open the top and bottom pockets into a boat shape.
Use the corners on both sides of the boat to form the bamboo; since the steps are intricate, proceed carefully, folding each part neatly.
The fan is made by accordion-folding a small rectangular sheet of origami paper.
The plum blossom can be made from a single sheet, and you’ll draw the flower’s center with a white pen.
Once all parts are finished, attach them to the base in a well-balanced arrangement to complete your piece.
New Year mini wreath

Here’s an idea for a wreath made by connecting simple, easy-to-fold parts.
Prepare sixteen 7.5 cm square sheets of origami paper.
Changing the color every four sheets or incorporating traditional Japanese patterned paper will give it a festive look.
First, let’s make the parts: fold the top left and right corners of the paper in to meet at the center.
Next, fold the bottom edge up to align with the base of the triangle you just made, then roll-fold once more to create a crease.
Open the section you just creased, and fold the bottom portion of the paper up to align with the third crease from the bottom.
Flip the paper over, and fold the two corners that stick out from the triangle inward.
Finally, fold the bottom edge up along the crease, then fold the paper in half by bringing the left and right sides together to complete one part.
Fold the remaining 15 sheets the same way, and connect them to form a circular wreath.
Shimenawa wreath origami

Here’s an idea for a shimenawa wreath made by connecting separate parts.
First, fold a 7.5 cm square sheet of origami paper into a triangle.
Next, fold the left corner of the triangle up to meet the top corner.
Up to this point, you’re just making creases, so unfold the paper back to its original shape.
Now, fold the top and bottom corners in toward the center.
Fold the paper in half along the first horizontal crease you made, then fold the left corner up along the diagonal crease to complete one part.
Make eight of these parts and connect them to form the wreath.
When connecting them, slightly offset each piece and fold the corners to express the rounded look of the rope—that’s the key.
Also create the bundled rope section and decorative pieces to finish the wreath with a festive touch.
Auspicious! Sea bream origami

When it comes to auspicious fish eaten at New Year’s in Japan, sea bream (tai) is the classic choice.
So during our January craft time, let’s make a sea bream out of origami.
In this idea, we’ll use a 15 cm sheet for the head and a 7.5 cm sheet for the tail fin, then combine them to complete the fish.
For the head, first fold the paper into a triangle, then fold both bottom corners up to meet the top corner.
Next, fold the raised section back outward, and on the right side only, open that folded-back section and squash it flat.
This part becomes the dorsal fin, the side you didn’t fold becomes the pectoral fin, and the remaining top corner forms the mouth.
From here, you’ll be making precise adjustments—cutting small slits with scissors and tucking in corners—so proceed carefully.
The tail fin is finished in seven folds.



