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[For 1-year-olds] Let’s Learn About May! A Collection of Recommended Craft Ideas

[For 1-year-olds] Let’s Learn About May! A Collection of Recommended Craft Ideas
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[For 1-year-olds] Let’s Learn About May! A Collection of Recommended Craft Ideas

At around one year old, children’s range of movement and interests expand dramatically as they stand, walk, and reach out with their hands.

You’ll want to provide creative activities that stimulate them during craft time, too.

May includes Children’s Day and Mother’s Day.

Let’s enjoy crafts related to these events with one-year-olds.

Here is a roundup of May craft ideas designed for one-year-olds that they can do without strain.

Because we treat what children make as works of art, the term is written as “seisaku (制作)” in the text.

Please use this as a reference.

[For 1-year-olds] Let’s learn about May! Recommended craft ideas (1–10)

Ladybug made with tissue paper

[From around 1 year old] Make a ladybug with finger-play. It’s not cute at all, but it’s a fun craft! lol
Ladybug made with tissue paper

It’s fun to stick round stickers all over! Let me share a ladybug craft idea using tissue paper.

For children, ladybugs are tiny, eye-catching, and fascinating—their movements spark kids’ curiosity.

By watching ladybugs, noticing their colors and how they move, children will want to touch and observe them, deepening their learning.

This time, let’s make a ladybug using tissue paper, a small bag, and black round stickers! Stick on as many stickers as you like.

You’ll end up with an adorable, one-of-a-kind creation!

Making bento (Japanese lunchbox)

[For 1-year-olds] Let's make a bento and go for a walk!
Making bento (Japanese lunchbox)

Here’s a fun craft for making a picnic-style bento that’s perfect for a sunny day.

The key is to prepare the ingredients—like rolled omelet, sausages, broccoli, and tomatoes—in advance using construction paper or origami paper.

For the main items like rice balls, making them together with the kids can boost the excitement.

Once you’ve laid out the prepared ingredients on the table, start packing them into the bento box.

By choosing and packing the ingredients themselves, children can think about what foods they like and how much will fit, making it both engaging and enjoyable.

Taking your special bento box out for a walk or little outing is a great way to enjoy the season, too.

Rapeseed blossoms made with tissue paper

Making Rapeseed Flowers with Tissue Paper (from around age 1)
Rapeseed blossoms made with tissue paper

Tear, paste, and have fun! Here are ideas for making rapeseed blossoms with tissue paper.

Brightly colored, eye-catching flowers are so appealing to children.

They use their five senses to learn—drawn to the colors, shapes, and fragrances of flowers, enjoying touching and smelling them.

Let’s try creating the rapeseed blossoms they saw and touched on a walk! Tearing and pasting tissue paper, and feeling its texture, can also become play that uses the fingers and a chance to practice fine motor skills.

Give it a try and incorporate it into your activities.

Onigiri Boy

https://www.instagram.com/p/C6qi-_yJ41Q/

May has the perfect weather for field trips, doesn’t it? Here’s a craft that lets you enjoy a field-trip mood: making a little rice-ball buddy.

Gather construction paper, scissors, crayons, kitchen paper (paper towels), double-sided tape, and clear tape, and let’s get started.

Use crayons to draw rice-ball fillings on the kitchen paper.

It’s fun to use lots of different colors.

Wrap a tissue with the illustrated kitchen paper, shape it into a triangle, and keep forming it.

Cut black construction paper into a nori (seaweed) shape and stick it on to finish.

It would be great to enjoy pretend field trips with the delicious-looking rice balls the children make!

walk bag

https://www.instagram.com/p/DD6rAHjsC6m/

Let’s put our treasures inside and take a closer look! Here are some ideas for a nature-walk bag.

Children are naturally curious about the world around them, and by seeing and touching things for themselves, they love making new discoveries.

For example, when they find something appealing like a pretty stone, a leaf, or a flower, they feel it’s special and think, “I want to keep this safe!” At times like that, having a handmade walk bag lets them bring their treasures home, observe their finds more carefully, and show them to a parent or teacher—leading to a real sense of satisfaction.

A little bird made with scribbles

https://www.instagram.com/p/C5swjK0Jkj-/

Let’s draw freely with crayons! Here are some ideas for making little birds from scribbles.

Scribbling refers to the bold, free lines and drawings that children create just as they please.

It’s characterized by lines drawn casually with big movements of the hands and arms.

This is an important time to enjoy the fun of drawing and take the first step in self-expression, so let’s make something that makes the most of children’s drawings! What you’ll need: drawing paper, crayons, paper parts (made from construction paper), glue, and scissors.

Give it a try!

Dandelions Made with Sponge Stamps

https://www.tiktok.com/@hoiku.labo/video/7218485641850522882

Have fun stamping with a pop-pop rhythm! Here are some dandelion craft ideas you can make with sponge stamps.

Many kids don’t like getting their hands dirty, but these sponge stamps are perfect even for them.

Attach a piece of sponge to the tip of a disposable chopstick with a rubber band, soak it in paint, and pop-pop stamp onto construction paper! The dandelion flowers you make from paper will look even more vibrant.

Be sure to try this for your spring crafts!

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