Let’s handcraft a play kitchen—the kind kids dream about! You can enjoy building the stove, faucet, shelves, and more while getting creative with different ideas.
A one-of-a-kind kitchen packed with your child’s preferences and a caregiver’s personal touches will be something they can enjoy for a long time.
We’ve gathered a variety of ideas, so you can choose what suits you best—from selecting materials to the steps you want to tackle.
When you see your child happily playing with the handmade kitchen, you’ll truly feel, “I’m so glad we made it!”
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[Packed with Simple Ideas] DIY Pretend-Play Corner (1–10)
play kitchen refrigerator

Once you’ve made a kitchen, the next thing you’ll want is a refrigerator! Try making a handmade fridge using craft materials like cardboard and origami paper.
Assemble the cardboard, secure it with packing tape, and line the sides and interior with construction paper.
Stand the cardboard upright and add parts like doors, shelves, and handles to complete a double-door refrigerator.
If you attach magnets to the doors or add LED lights inside, it will look even more realistic! It also works great as a place to store play food.
Kitchen made from reclaimed materials

A kitchen full of playful features: flames made from wool felt coming out of the stovetop grates, real water flowing from a pump that stands in for a faucet, and more.
All you need are materials like cardboard, pumps from used shampoo or hand soap bottles, trays, and toilet paper rolls.
It’s great that you can make it from household recyclables.
You can also use your favorite wrapping paper instead of a makeover sheet to cover the cardboard.
This DIY kitchen is eco-friendly and sure to delight your child—so enjoy crafting it together as a parent-child activity.
Glowing gas stove

This is a pretty authentic handmade play kitchen where kids can cook with an IH-style stove and really feel the experience! The secret behind the glowing stove is an LED strip.
Lining the inside with aluminum foil makes the light reflect beautifully.
The base of the kitchen is a color storage cube you can buy at a home improvement store.
It’s adorable and makes you want to try making one yourself, and the lights and moving parts are sure to get kids super excited! If you’re a teacher or guardian who’s good with wiring and such, definitely give it a try.
Play kitchen made from 100-yen store slatted racks

Slatted wood panels from 100-yen shops, well-known as DIY staples, can actually be used to make a play kitchen too! Combine the slats like a rack, secure them with adhesive, and fill the gaps with a hot glue gun.
Cover the back with more slats, then add hooks from the 100-yen shop and install items like a cardboard-made microwave door, and you’ll have an adorable kitchen that showcases the warmth of wood.
It’s sturdy as well, so your child can enjoy it for a long time.
Kitchen made with color (storage) boxes

If you lay a cube storage unit on its side to use as a base, you can create a play kitchen at just the right height for kids.
Cut out a section of the side panel to inset a dish as a sink, and use wood or corkboard to add a stovetop and stove knobs.
The cubbies are perfect as storage space for small toys! Even children who usually don’t like tidying up might be willing to help if you say, as part of the pretend play, “Let’s put everything away neatly under the kitchen.”
cake

How about handmaking a cake that will be a big hit for pretend play? You can make all kinds of cakes, starting with kids’ favorite strawberry shortcake.
The materials? Puzzle mats! Cut the mat to your preferred size, and cut felt the same way.
Glue the colorful felt and mat together, stacking them alternately to complete the base.
After that, just stick on yarn balls you can get at a 100-yen shop.
Make lots of colorful, delicious-looking cakes for the kids!
A kitchen made using a cork board and baskets

This is a play kitchen you can make using a cork board and a basket you can find at 100-yen shops.
Prepare round plates or bowls, cut the cork board to match their shapes, and fit them in—before you know it, you’ve got a kitchen sink! Then gather round and stick-shaped wooden parts, and attach them to look like a stove and stove knobs.
If you connect part of the board to the basket with zip ties, it can also be used as a toy box that opens and closes.
This way, tidying up practice will be fun, too.



