[Childcare] Perfect for October! Autumn crafts to enjoy with 5-year-olds
October is packed with events like sports day, field trips, and Halloween.
Some five-year-olds will also be celebrating Shichi-Go-San.
How about making some lovely crafts to help children enjoy October even more? We’ve gathered ideas themed around these events, as well as ones kids can use on the day itself.
We’ve also included craft ideas with slightly more complex steps that five-year-olds can handle.
It would be great if they could take a few days and work on them until they’re satisfied.
Since items made by children are treated as works, we use the term “seisaku” (production) in the text.
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[Childcare] Perfect for October! Autumn crafts to enjoy with 5-year-olds (31–40)
Autumn wall display! Mushrooms and bagworms

This is a wall decoration of mushrooms and bagworms that’s fun to stick on with glue.
First, make the parts.
Using construction paper in your favorite colors, cut out mushrooms in various shapes.
If you’re working with small children, please cut them in advance.
After cutting slits in the mushrooms, cut separate pieces of construction paper to serve as the stems.
Next, make the bagworms.
Have the children help with what they can, like drawing the eyes.
Now for the assembly.
Tear pieces of construction paper and glue them onto a background sheet to form the bagworm’s body.
Add the eyes and a little hat, too.
Finally, overlap the mushroom pieces at the slits and glue them so they become three-dimensional—that’s it, you’re done.
Autumn fruit! Persimmon with origami

Fold the orange origami paper in half twice to make a small square, crease well, and open it.
With the colored side facing up, fold the bottom edge up to meet the center crease.
On the white section you folded up, stick a piece of green origami paper of the same size.
Rotate the paper top-to-bottom, then flip it over, and fold the top left and right edges in to meet the vertical center line.
Flip the paper over and fold the top green triangle downward.
Flip the paper over again, open the green pocket into a triangle, and flatten it.
Fold the bottom left and right corners up to match the shape of the orange triangle above, then fold the left and right corners inward to round the shape like a persimmon.
Flip the paper over and fold down the two triangles sticking out at the top to finish.
Fall foliage viewing in your room!
@hanamikoto8 Leaf-peeping in the room 🍁Origami#Autumn leavesMaple leavesMapleHow to make#Production Video#SeniorActivities#100-yen-shopHandmade#hanamikotoHere’s an easy way to make maple leaves with origami. Gradient origami paper from the 100-yen shop is also recommended! They look beautiful as hanging decorations. You can enjoy autumn foliage indoors for a long time. Please feel free to use this at senior facilities, daycare centers, kindergartens, event venues, and many other places.
♬ Stylish cafe-style BGM – Hiro Hattori
Cut a sheet of origami paper into four equal strips (tanzaku) with scissors and separate them.
You’ll use only three, so set one aside for another craft.
Fold each of the three pieces in half vertically, then in half horizontally, in that order.
For just one of the three pieces, cut along the crease made by the horizontal fold to split it in two.
Take one of these halves, fold it so its length is halved, and round off the corner on the side where the layers are not connected.
Insert the remaining uncut piece between the others, and make a matching curved cut slightly above the first curve.
Cut the remaining two pieces in the same way, staple them together at the base, and then fan open the layers—the shape will look like a maple leaf.
Cute autumn-leaf origami
@cuty_diyorigami Super easy ♡ Beautiful autumn leaves ♡#craft#handmade#diy#tiktok classroom#HandmadeGirlsautumn leaves#FlowerAutumn: the changing of the seasonsOrigami ChallengeArtBeautiful
♬ Buddy – HIRAIDAI
Here’s an idea for a maple leaf made by combining parts.
If you use 7.5 cm origami paper, you’ll get a nicely sized leaf.
First, fold the paper into a triangle to make a crease, then open it.
Place the paper so the crease runs horizontally, and fold the left edge in to meet the crease.
Next, fold the right corner toward the center and tuck it underneath the section you just folded.
With the isosceles triangle positioned upside down, fold the top edge from both sides to align with the center line.
Open the small triangles on the left and right into diamond shapes, and one part is complete.
Make five identical parts, stack and glue them together, then roll another piece of origami to make the stem and attach it.
Origami Squirrel Arrangement
@poccle I tweaked the cup fold ✨ and came up with a cute way to fold a squirrel 🌰❤️ProductionOrigamiOrigami folding instructionsOrigami playChildcareNursery teacher / Childcare worker#Nursery school#KindergartenKindergarten TeacherorigamiSquirrelNursery school teacher#Childcare CraftingAutumn Crafts#AtHomePlay
♬ Relaxing, cute everyday BGM – Avi
Fold the origami paper into a triangle, then fold both side corners diagonally upward toward the center to make a cup shape.
Flip the origami so top and bottom are reversed, and fold the corners you just made diagonally upward to form the squirrel’s ears, then turn the paper over.
Fold up a small portion of the top layer at the bottom corner, then roll-fold it further to create the white belly.
Cut into the remaining single layer and shape it into the tail.
Draw the face with a pen and add patterns on the body to finish.
Making some acorns to display alongside it will help create an even more autumnal feel.
[Childcare] Perfect for October! Autumn crafts to enjoy with 5-year-olds (41–50)
Grapes made with origami
Open the origami after folding it into a triangle, and place it so the crease runs horizontally.
Fold the two left edges in to meet the crease, then fold the right corner toward the center.
If the origami forms an isosceles triangle, the base for the grapes is complete.
Apply double-sided tape to the front and attach crumpled tissue paper to represent the grape berries.
Finally, glue on a stem made from construction paper to finish.
Using several shades of the same color for the tissue paper gives a vibrant look.
Switch to green to make muscat grapes.
Chestnut made with origami
@hoikushi_worker Produced in OctoberNovember productionAutumn CraftsorigamiOrigamiOrigami folding instructionsChestnutNursery teacher / Childcare worker#Childcare Crafting#Nursery School CraftKindergarten craftMaking and crafting play#Making Play#Childcare topic#HandmadeToysInfant Craft
Seventh Song – RADWIMPS
After folding the origami paper into a triangle twice to crease it, open it up and fold the top corner down to the center.
Turn the paper over, fold the bottom corner up to the center, then make another valley fold.
Turn the paper over again, and fold the top edges inward from both sides so they meet along the vertical crease.
Fold up the sections sticking out from both sides of the triangle, tuck the left and right corners inward, and shape it into a chestnut to finish.
Draw patterns on the white part of the origami and use it as a piece for wall decorations or as a little accent in your crafts.


