[Childcare] June wall display ideas
In rainy June, why not make some wall decorations at your nursery or kindergarten to brighten the children’s mood? Adding designs perfect for the rainy season, or decorations themed around events like Cavity Prevention Day and Time Memorial Day, will make things even more fun.
There are also plenty of ideas to liven up the room with themes like flowers that bloom in June and cute creatures.
Using motifs that easily capture children’s interest will double the enjoyment! Decorate the room and enjoy the rainy season with the children in a fresh, cheerful spirit.
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[Childcare] June Wall Decoration Ideas (21–30)
A teru teru bozu you can make with a single sheet of origami paper

Make it with a single sheet of origami! Here are ideas for crafting a teru teru bozu.
These suggestions are perfect for anyone wanting to make one.
Use stickers and pens to draw expressions and create your very own teru teru bozu.
You’ll need one sheet of white origami paper, a black pen, a white pen or correction fluid, and a pink pen.
You can attach a string and hang it by the window, or stick it onto light-blue construction paper and display it together with motifs like umbrellas and hydrangeas—it looks lovely either way.
Give it a try!
Tadpoles and Frogs
Perfect for May when the rainy season begins, this is a wall decoration featuring tadpoles and frogs.
Cut origami paper into tadpole shapes, attach parts like the eyes, then make a small slit between the eyes and overlap the pieces to create a semi-3D tadpole.
You can also cut out tadpoles from a coloring sheet for a cute result.
The frog is made by opening up a paper cup: draw and cut the hands and feet on the sides, unfold, then apply origami paper to form the frog’s shape.
Finish by displaying them together with hydrangeas made by crumpling origami into balls and lotus leaves for the frogs to sit on.
[Age 0] Umbrella and Frog Made with Sticker Pasting
Let’s try a rainy-season craft made with stickers.
This activity is suitable for 0-year-olds and lets them enjoy sticker pasting and finger stamping.
First, prepare white drawing paper as the base and use finger stamps to represent raindrops.
Next, stick stickers onto an umbrella base cut from construction paper to create a pattern.
Cut out a frog shape from construction paper and attach a photo of the child to the face area.
Finally, arrange and glue the umbrella and frog pieces onto the base paper to finish! Do the finger stamping and sticker pasting together with the child, and have an adult handle the other steps.
[Age 0] An Umbrella and a Frog’s Raincoat Made with Sticker-Pasting
We’re introducing a rainy-season craft idea featuring a soft, gentle-looking frog in a raincoat and a cute, colorful umbrella.
First, let’s make the frog’s raincoat using a bleeding-paint technique.
Brush water onto drawing paper, then let watercolor paint bleed on top to create patterns.
Watching the paint gently spread is lots of fun.
Once the paint is dry, cut it into the shape of a raincoat and draw the frog’s eyes and buttons.
Also paste on separately cut pieces for the child’s face and rain boots.
Cut out umbrella parts from construction paper, stick on round stickers of different sizes and colors, and then glue all the parts onto a backing sheet to finish! For 0-year-olds, enjoy the sticker application step together with an adult.
Sparkly Clear Umbrella [Age 2]
How about making a sparkly transparent umbrella using clear folders? First, cut the clear folders to create two umbrella bases.
Also prepare the umbrella tip and handle out of construction paper.
Next, cut materials like curling ribbon (suzuran tape), color film, and glittery origami into small pieces.
An adult should handle the preparations up to this point.
Have the children tear flower paper and paste it onto the umbrella base together with the curling ribbon, color film, and so on.
Finally, layer the tip and handle pieces, sandwich them between the second base, and glue everything together to finish.
It glitters beautifully in the light, so try sticking it on a window!
[Age 5] Umbrella bouquet made with paper plates
Let’s make a festive umbrella bouquet to brighten up your space.
Cut a paper plate in half, then trim the cut edge into an arch to resemble the rim of an umbrella.
Cut out the handle from another part of the paper plate and attach it to the umbrella piece.
Paint the umbrella and handle in bright colors, then glue on flowers made from tissue paper to finish.
Adding round stickers to the centers of the flowers makes them look even more realistic.
When you display it, punch a hole in the handle, thread a string through, and hang it so the umbrella is upside down.
[Finger Painting] Colorful Snails
When June arrives, we often see snails on hydrangeas.
Their cute and curious appearance makes them popular with children.
Here’s an idea for making snails using a finger-painting technique.
First, draw a spiral for the snail’s shell on construction paper.
Then place a mixture of paint and liquid laundry glue on top, and seal it inside a plastic bag.
Let the children touch the bag and spread the paint around as they like from the outside.
Once the painting is done, cut out the spiral and attach it to a body made from a toilet paper roll.
Use several colors of paint to create colorful snails that will blow away the rainy-season blues!




