For Seniors: Come, Spring! Recommended March Craft Ideas for Daycare Services
In this article, we introduce March craft ideas recommended for seniors!
When it comes to March events, there are many with a cute image, like Hinamatsuri (Girls’ Day) and White Day.
Using lots of soft colors like pink and white in your crafts can put you in a gentle mood.
It’s the season when spring flowers begin to bloom, so let’s create a bright, festive atmosphere through crafting!
There are plenty of ideas you can use in senior day services and other elder care facilities, so please use them as a reference when making crafts together.
- [For Seniors] Crafts to Make in March! Recommended Project Ideas
- For Seniors: Recommended Wall Decoration Ideas for March
- [Day Service] Spring Take-Home Crafts: Ideas to Warmly Brighten Your Room
- [For Seniors] March Origami: Ideas to Brighten Your Room with Seasonal Flowers and Events
- [For Seniors] Spring Wall Decorations: A Collection of Ideas to Brighten Up Your Room
- [Day Service] Excited for Hinamatsuri! Craft ideas to brighten up your room
- [For Seniors] Brighten Up Hinamatsuri: Wall Decoration Ideas
- [For Seniors] Have Fun Making Things Based on Today’s Mood! Today’s Recommended Craft
- [For Seniors] Color Your Care Facility’s Spring: Wall Decoration Ideas
- [For Seniors] Hinamatsuri Recreation: Fun Ideas for Games, Crafts, and Snack Making
- For seniors: Heartwarming and cozy. Recommended handmade Hina dolls
- [For seniors] Enjoy spring: April craft ideas
- [For Seniors] Making a March Calendar: Introducing Spring-Themed Motifs and Arrangements
[For Seniors] Come, Spring! 10 Recommended March Craft Ideas for Day Services (231–240)
field of rapeseed flowers
A wall decoration themed around a field of rapeseed blossoms is a great idea for creating a bright, spring-like atmosphere.
Cut origami paper in half, fold it into small sections, and crease it.
Cut along the creases to form a square, then round the edges to shape the petals.
The key is to add a gentle curl to the petals.
Place the pieces you’ve made on top of a ball of crumpled origami paper.
For the stems, cut paper into rectangles, bend them into a bow shape, and give them a curve.
Make two types of leaves and add wrinkles to recreate a more realistic rapeseed field.
The gluing process also serves as fine motor exercise and is recommended for those who enjoy detailed work.
dandelion
Origami dandelions sound like a lovely way to feel the arrival of spring.
It’s wonderful to sense the changing seasons through warm, heartfelt creations.
The act of folding origami can stimulate ideas and thinking.
I’ve heard that enjoying hands-on activities can also help prevent dementia.
Displaying the finished pieces in your room will create a bright, cozy atmosphere.
It seems like something everyone can make together while chatting and having fun.
How about creating some beautiful pieces with older adults and enjoying the coming of spring together?
horsetail
Let’s make cute horsetails that sprout in spring using origami.
It’s a fun craft that’s easy for everyone, from young children to seniors.
All you need is origami paper.
There are no difficult steps in the process.
Anyone can make it casually, so please give it a try.
Before you start, crumple the origami paper with your hands.
Doing so adds three-dimensional texture to the finished piece, making it look more realistic.
Use the crumpled origami paper to make the head and the lower stem parts.
Then, use green origami paper to create the leaves of the field horsetail (sugina), layer them with the horsetail, and glue them together to finish.
They’ll look adorable displayed on a wall.
Tsurushi-bina made with materials from a 100-yen shop

The Doll Festival (Hinamatsuri) comes from parents’ wishes for their children to grow up healthy.
The hanging hina decorations introduced here are easy to make, since you can get all the materials at a 100-yen shop.
Did you know that each part of a hanging hina has its own meaning? The peach symbolizes longevity, the strawberry wards off misfortune, the rabbit repels evil, and the dumpling signifies not having trouble with food, among other important origins.
Made with adhesive fabric paper that has a chirimen (crepe) look, the result is a charming, atmospheric ornament.
The ceiling-hanging style is also nice because it doesn’t take up floor space and can go almost anywhere.
Easy Hina Dolls with a Topsy-Tail Twist

These are Hina dolls made using fabric tape that you can even buy at 100-yen shops.
Since you stick washi-patterned fabric tape onto another piece of cloth to make them, no needles are used.
It’s safe for elderly people to work on as well.
After sticking the fabrics together, turn the piece inside out through a small slit with a quick “twist.” Once turned inside out, the head and neck portion takes shape.
Use craft supplies or origami to make the face and small accessories, then attach them to the fabric you prepared.
You’ll have simple Hina dolls with an elegant, mature feel.
It’s a project you can keep enjoying afterward—take it home and display it in your room.
Hina dolls placed on a table, gently swaying

Here’s a simple Hina Matsuri decoration idea that older adults can easily enjoy: hang chenille stems (pipe cleaners) from a paper cup.
Draw illustrations on the paper cup with pens or stickers, then poke a hole in the center of the bottom.
Twist three pipe cleaners together from about 2 cm down to the halfway point, and thread them through the hole in the cup.
Secure the pipe cleaners on the inside, then wrap their ends around a pen to form the base.
Tape on decorations made from construction paper and add gradient foam balls.
Once assembled, you’ll have a gently swaying hanging Hina display.
Sakura wreath made of felt

Felt creations have a soft, cozy texture, don’t they? This felt cherry blossom wreath is a spring-like motif that brightens up any space just by being displayed.
Make five evenly spaced cuts in the pink felt.
Shape each section into a cherry blossom petal.
Sew them together with a needle and thread to form a three-dimensional cherry blossom.
Make white felt blossoms the same way, then add color with blush.
Create small pom-poms from yarn and attach each one to wire to finish.
Be sure to work carefully and safely when using needles and wire.
A cherry blossom wreath—familiar and beloved by many older adults—will warm the hearts of everyone who sees it.






