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Have fun with one-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas featuring recommended January motifs

Have fun with one-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas featuring recommended January motifs
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Have fun with one-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas featuring recommended January motifs

January is the season for crafts that let you enjoy the New Year atmosphere with children! One-year-olds love using their fingers and experiencing the feel of paint.

Here, we introduce craft ideas featuring January-specific motifs like kite flying, kagami mochi, and daruma.

Crumple and paste tissue paper, dab with stamps, or roll marbles around.

Each activity is something children can immerse themselves in and thoroughly enjoy.

Savor the lingering New Year spirit while enjoying seasonal crafts with the kids! Since the children’s creations are treated as artworks, the term is written as “seisaku” (制作) in the text.

Have fun with one-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas featuring recommended January motifs (1–10)

Let’s roll and make a snowman!

[January - Craft Activity] Crumple-and-Tear Snowman ☃
Let’s roll and make a snowman!

Crumpling tissue paper and sticking on stickers is so much fun! How about making a snowman craft that’s perfect for winter? First, have the children crumple white tissue paper into balls in whatever size they like.

You’ll also use tissue paper torn into strips; if that step is tricky, an adult can prepare it in advance.

Put the crumpled tissue paper and the torn strips together into a clear plastic bag, then shape it into an oval.

Tie the middle with a chenille stem (pipe cleaner) to form a snowman shape.

Use round stickers for the face, make a bucket hat from construction paper, and attach it with double-sided tape.

If you want to hang it, punch a hole in the bucket, and thread a string through.

Make it with paper plates! Cute snowman

[Childcare Craft] Winter craft! Easy paper plate snowman
Make it with paper plates! Cute snowman

This is a snowman craft idea that also lets kids enjoy sticking stickers.

Stack and glue two paper plates vertically to make the base, then finish the snowman using round stickers and parts cut from construction paper.

If infants are doing this activity, it may help to put double-sided tape on the back of the parts to turn them into stickers.

Also, pre-cut the pipe cleaners to use as arms and assist with attaching them using tape.

Changing the colors of the construction paper and stickers will change the snowman’s look, so let the children choose the ones they like.

Fun to draw! Snow globe

https://www.tiktok.com/@tensaikids1031/video/7185464579613379841

This is a recommended craft activity for infants.

They’re making snow globes.

On circles cut from construction paper, children draw spiral circles with crayons and add shiny round stickers to represent the snow globes.

Showing them a real snow globe before starting can help spark their imagination.

Provide crayons and stickers in various colors and let them freely create their own snow globe worlds.

Crafts that use stickers are also perfect for practicing fine motor skills!

Fun with black construction paper! Making snowmen

https://www.tiktok.com/@hekimen_25/video/7312804209915694354

Here’s a craft idea: paint a snowman with white paint on black construction paper, then finish by adding a paper bucket and mittens, plus face stickers.

For the snowman, draw a circular outline and fill it in with paint.

Because it’s surprisingly hard not to paint outside the lines, if infants are doing this activity, it’s better to either prepare pre-painted pieces or have an adult cut a snowman shape from the child’s white-painted paper and glue it onto the background.

If you put double-sided tape on the back of the bucket and mittens, kids can use them like stickers, making them easier for little hands to handle.

Once the snowman is done, use cotton swab stamping to add a snowy landscape in the empty space to complete the project.

Fukuwarai from a one-year-old!

[Fukuwarai!?] New Year’s craft from around age 1. Recommended for January. #childcareideas #childcarecrafts #DIY #crafts #handmade #homemade #preschoolteacherlife #easycrafts #YearOfTheDragon
Fukuwarai from a one-year-old!

Here are some craft ideas for making Fukuwarai with construction paper.

Just cut out the parts from the paper, glue them together, and draw patterns with a pen to finish.

With a bit of adult help—such as pre-cutting the pieces—even young children can take part.

Put double-sided tape on the facial features and let the kids enjoy sticking them on while playing Fukuwarai.

The classics are Hyottoko and Okame, but a daruma or the zodiac animal of the year also make great motifs.

Enjoy a winter craft session to your heart’s content, with a playful spirit.

A craft spinning top that 1-year-olds can enjoy!

Work No.038 “Spinning Top Making” [Handmade Toy by a Nursery Teacher]
A craft spinning top that 1-year-olds can enjoy!

Here’s an idea for making a spinning top that even infants can enjoy.

You’ll need a milk carton, a plastic bottle cap, and round stickers.

First, snip the four corners and open the milk carton into a cross shape.

From the edge of the square base, measure 11 cm and cut all four opened sides at that line.

Next, round off the corners and use a craft knife to make round holes near the top of each side.

Decorate with stickers, then glue a plastic bottle cap to the center, and you’re done! If it’s hard to spin using the cap, try hooking a finger through one of the side holes to spin it.

Also great for walls! Paper plate spinning top

[Childcare Craft] Perfect for New Year's wall decorations! Spinning tops made from paper plates | Frames made from paper plates
Also great for walls! Paper plate spinning top

Let’s make a festive spinning top that you’ll want to display on the wall.

First, cut a paper plate in half.

Then, attach a strip of construction paper along the straight edge of the plate and decorate it with round stickers on top.

Use crayons to draw patterns for the top on the remaining white part of the plate.

Finally, attach the axle piece made from construction paper to the back of the plate, and you’re done.

Spinning tops are a New Year’s classic, and even little ones might look at this wall display—or watch older kids playing with tops—and feel inspired to try it themselves.

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