For Seniors: Recommended Wall Decoration Ideas for March
March brings more warm days, and it’s a lovely season when colorful flowers like cherry blossoms, dandelions, and clover begin to bloom.
Many people may feel the arrival of spring and spend their days with excitement.
In this article, we’ll introduce wall decoration ideas for older adults.
There are plenty of opportunities to decorate in care facilities such as day service centers, so please use these ideas as a reference.
Let’s decorate your room with cute creations and enjoy an early taste of spring!
- [For Seniors] Spring Wall Decorations: A Collection of Ideas to Brighten Up Your Room
- [For Seniors] Brighten Up Hinamatsuri: Wall Decoration Ideas
- For Seniors: Come, Spring! Recommended March Craft Ideas for Daycare Services
- For Seniors: Feel the Arrival of Warm Spring. Cherry Blossom Wall Decoration Ideas
- [For Seniors] Crafts to Make in March! Recommended Project Ideas
- [For Seniors] Color Your Care Facility’s Spring: Wall Decoration Ideas
- [For Seniors] March Origami: Ideas to Brighten Your Room with Seasonal Flowers and Events
- [Day Service] Excited for Hinamatsuri! Craft ideas to brighten up your room
- [For Seniors] Activities to Enjoy March: Games, Crafts, Music, and Snack Recreation
- [For Seniors] March-Themed Event Activities
- For seniors: Heartwarming and cozy. Recommended handmade Hina dolls
- [For Seniors] Making a March Calendar: Introducing Spring-Themed Motifs and Arrangements
- For Seniors: Wall Decorations to Brighten Up February — Festive Ideas for Setsubun, Valentine’s Day, Plum Blossoms, and More
[For Seniors] Recommended for March! Wall Decoration Ideas (111–120)
Spring floral arrangement

Here’s a frame arrangement using materials you can get at a 100-yen shop.
Display it by your front door or in a room to easily bring a sense of spring.
All you need is a frame and artificial flowers.
First, remove the back panel of the frame and check the size.
When attaching the artificial flowers to the back panel, be careful not to let them overlap the edges, or the frame won’t close.
Decide on a layout with a focal flower in the center and surrounding flowers, then trim the stems and attach them slightly inward so the back can close.
If you can close it without crushing the flowers, you’re done.
The steps are simple, making it a great activity for recreation in senior facilities as well.
Hanging decoration of peach blossoms

Here’s an idea for a hanging decoration that showcases the beautiful shades of peach blossoms.
Why not make items to decorate for Hinamatsuri or to brighten the walls and doors of senior care facilities? Fold pink origami or tissue paper and make small cuts with scissors to create petal shapes.
Once you’ve made each part in the same size, attach them to a string for the hanging decoration.
Finally, add flower details with round stickers, and your peach blossom hanging decoration is complete.
It’s also recommended to use floral-patterned paper or display cherry blossoms together.
Collage of cherry blossoms

Why not feel the arrival of spring with a cherry blossom collage? Prepare a sheet of stiff black cardstock and cut it in half.
Use a cherry blossom craft punch to cut designs from patterned paper or origami, making lots of blossoms.
Draw the tree trunk on the black cardstock with a white colored pencil, then glue on the blossoms.
Layer them so they overlap and fill in the gaps.
When applying glue, don’t coat the entire piece—apply it only to part of each blossom and attach it lightly to create a three-dimensional effect.
The contrast of vivid blossoms against the black cardstock makes for a beautiful piece.
Because it uses fine finger movements, it’s great for finger dexterity training for seniors.
Consider incorporating it into craft recreation activities at senior care facilities.
Sakura mochi

Simply sticking origami with spring-themed motifs onto a plain calendar can instantly transform it into an exciting spring-season calendar.
Sakura mochi, a traditional Japanese sweet enjoyed when the cherry blossoms bloom, has a soft, fluffy texture that feels very spring-like and is so familiar it’s even used as a seasonal word in haiku.
Its pink color is bright and festive, so it’s highly recommended.
Both the mochi part and the leaf part have simple folding methods, so you can try them casually.
For the leaf, use slightly muted green origami to create the right atmosphere.
Eraser-stamp Hina dolls

How about making a gentle-looking Hina Doll calendar using eraser stamps made from various parts? Cut out the necessary pieces: connect rectangular parts to form the tiered stand, and use circular parts for the faces, and so on.
When stamping, it’s a good idea to wipe each part stamp with kneaded eraser to keep the colors from mixing.
The parts can be shared among several people, and regardless of drawing skill, you can simply stamp away in your favorite colors—pat, pat—to create an adorable set of Hina dolls.
Give it a try!



