Fun January Crafts! A Collection of Ideas You Can Make and Play With for 5-Year-Olds
The arts-and-crafts activities you include in January childcare are a perfect chance to share the fun of New Year’s traditions.
While exploring seasonal motifs like the lion dance, sacred Shinto ropes, and ema wishing plaques, it’s important to spark five-year-olds’ desire to “try it myself!” Here, we introduce ideas that stimulate children’s creativity—making snowmen with colorful cotton, creating waddling penguins from paper cups, and expressing a three-dimensional kagami mochi with whipped paint.
Enjoy the start of the new year together as you help children connect with tradition through hands-on projects! Since the children’s creations are treated as works of art, the term is written as “seisaku (制作)” in the text.
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- [Nursery/Kindergarten] New Year Craft Ideas: A Collection of Projects You Can Enjoy Even After Making Them
- For 4-Year-Olds: January Crafts! A Collection of Fun Ideas with Winter and New Year Themes
- [For 3-year-olds] Perfect January Winter & New Year Crafts! A Collection of Fun, Hands-On Ideas
- Recommended for 5-year-olds! Simple DIY toy ideas
- Have fun with one-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas featuring recommended January motifs
- [January] Enjoy with 2-year-olds! A collection of craft ideas that capture winter and the New Year
- [Childcare] Winter Projects You’ll Want to Try! Recommended Craft Ideas
- [For 4-year-olds] Enjoy February! A Collection of Craft Ideas
- For 5-Year-Olds: Let’s Make It! A Collection of Craft Ideas to Feel the Spring
- [January Crafts] Fun DIY Ideas for Kids: Perfect for Use in Childcare
- [Kindergartners (Older Group)] Folding is Fun! Recommended January Origami Idea Collection for Senior Kindergarteners
Fun January Crafts! A collection of ideas (111–120) you can make and play with alongside 5-year-olds
A pop-up shishimai (lion dance) toy

In January, many schools and centers hold lion dance performances, don’t they? The lion dance is a lucky charm, but it can feel a bit scary too.
So let’s make a fun popping lion dance using a paper cup.
Make a hole in the bottom of the paper cup and attach a green plastic bag to the rim side.
Be sure to make a hole in the green plastic bag as well, since you’ll thread a pair of chopsticks through it.
Thread the chopsticks through the holes in both the paper cup and the plastic bag, attach the lion’s face, and try moving it.
The lion’s face will pop out! Through this craft activity, you can also introduce children to the traditional lion dance.
In conclusion
In January childcare, five-year-olds can enjoy making crafts related to the New Year.
Using familiar materials like paper cups and empty boxes, there are plenty of activities that let children feel the atmosphere of traditional events while nurturing their imagination and fine motor skills.
Play with and display the finished creations, and enjoy the start of the new year together.



