Origami perfect for summer. Fun and easy for kids to make!
Summer is full of fun events like swimming at the beach or pool and fireworks festivals! How about expressing that summer with origami? Here, we’ll introduce origami that’s perfect for the season.
There are lots of designs, like cool ice cream, lanterns from summer festivals, and seasonal flowers and insects.
All of them are easy to make and can be completed in a short time, so they’re great even after water play.
Fold a variety, decorate your room, or enjoy a pretend festival with friends.
Have a fun summer with origami!
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Origami perfect for summer. Fun and easy for kids to make! (91–100)
Shell ornament

How about making origami shell decorations for Tanabata? They’re easy to make: you only fold for the first half, and after that you cut evenly spaced slits.
Open it up, align the corners along the diagonal, glue them together, and you’re done.
The slits look like a spiral shell and it’s very pretty.
If you cut the origami into quarter-size pieces first, you can make cute little shells, and linking those shells together is adorable too.
Used as Tanabata decorations, they might evoke the image of shells living in the Milky Way.
cute watermelon
https://www.tiktok.com/@poccle/video/7383482582572223745How about making a summery watermelon out of origami? You can use it for summer wall displays, Tanabata, festival decorations, and many other scenes.
It’s very easy to make! First, fold a red sheet of origami paper in half, cut a green sheet into a long thin strip, and glue the green strip along the bottom of the red paper to create the watermelon rind.
Next, accordion-fold the red paper and tape one side to hold it in place—that’s it! Use a black pen or stickers to add the seeds.
You can also thread string or ribbon through it to make a cute decoration.
Give it a try!
Easy Suica
@sachimama_asobi Easy! Let’s make watermelon you’ll want to eat in summer 🍉^^ Our eldest son in 2nd grade starts summer vacation tomorrow 🌻 We don’t have any long trips planned for now, but we’re thinking of enjoying lots of classic summer activities like catching stag beetles, going to a nearby pool, playing in the river, watermelon splitting, and getting shaved ice^^ I was so happy that so many people checked out yesterday’s post on how to make a stag beetle 🥰 Thanks to your lovely requests, today I posted how to fold a “watermelon 🍉”! Half-cut watermelon, quarter-cut watermelon. Red watermelon, yellow watermelon—please make your favorite versions ❤️ I think they’ll look super cute displayed together with yesterday’s stag beetle! I also tried making a yellow watermelon, and it turned out really cute 🥰 For the yellow watermelon, I used check-pattern origami for the rind. Note: You can find this at DAISO^^ Lately I’ve been getting messages from followers saying, “I tried making it!” and it makes me so happy and motivated! Please feel free to DM or comment, “I made it! 🙌” I’m waiting to hear from you🥰 +———————————————+ I’m Sachi-mama, raising three boys ages 7, 5, and 1—chaotic mom life in full swing ❀´- I share play ideas and easy crafts with kids using 100-yen items, nature finds, and recycled materials. Feel free to like, follow, and DM! +———————————————+How to Grow Watermelons How to make watermelon#AtHomePlay #AtHomePlayworkPlay with children#I love crafts Handmade Childcare #Summer Craft OrigamiSummer extreme heat Insect #BugLoverIndoor play origami #origamiEducational #EducationalPlay#StagBeetle watermelon Watermelon#How to fold a watermelon # How to fold a watermelon#Watermelon Craft Watermelon craft#watermelon
♬ Instrumental pop that makes you want to start running(1091280) – Single Cirquit
Here’s an easy watermelon idea you can make with origami.
Prepare green and red origami paper.
First, let’s make the rind with the green sheet.
Fold the paper in half twice to form a smaller square, then open it up and use the creases to fold all four corners toward the center.
Open the folded parts again, then fold each corner along the crease lines and make a second, tighter fold (a wrap fold).
Repeat for the remaining three corners.
Next, fold the four remaining white corners inward to match the width of the wrap folds.
Now use the red origami paper.
Up to folding all four corners to the center, the steps are the same.
From there, fold each of the four corners inward by about 2 cm.
Layer the two pieces and glue them together, and your watermelon is complete.
Try different shapes like a half-cut or quarter-cut and have fun!
whale

Fold the origami paper in half to make a crease.
Fold the corners up toward the center line, then fold the whole paper in half to start forming the whale shape.
Shape the whale’s body so it becomes large and rounded.
Finally, fold up the whale’s tail, draw the mouth with a felt-tip pen, and you’re done.
Give this popular whale a try—kids love it! Before making it, it’s also a good idea to show photos of whales or read picture books that feature whales as part of your explanation.
fish

I’ll show you how to fold a simple fish.
Get some origami paper, a felt-tip pen, and round stickers ready, and let’s make it.
Fold the origami paper in half to make a crease.
Fold both the left and right sides into triangles toward the center crease to make creases.
Open up the pockets at the corners, tuck them inside as you puff them out, and turn it over.
Fold the triangular section upward to form the fish’s tail.
Fold the lower-right and upper-right corners—adjusting their sizes—to shape the fish’s face.
Rotate it, flip it over, add a round sticker for the eye, and you’re done.
Give it a try!
sunflower

Let’s make a sunflower—one of the iconic flowers of summer—using origami.
Prepare one sheet of origami paper.
Fold the paper in half into a square twice to make crease lines.
Once you have the creases, fold each corner toward the center.
Continue folding the paper in sequence from the outside toward the inside.
Finally, draw a pattern in the center of the sunflower with a felt-tip pen to finish.
It might be cute to make many of them and arrange them like a sunflower field.
Let’s brighten up the room with sunflowers!
Tomatoes you can decorate with for Tanabata

Let’s make a cute tomato with origami.
Prepare red and green origami paper.
First, cut the green paper into four strips, and glue one strip—green side facing out—onto the top of the white side of the red paper.
Once it’s dry, start folding.
Fold the paper in half top to bottom and side to side to make a square, crease well, then open it.
Place it with the red side facing up.
Fold the top edge down by the width of the attached green strip.
Turn the paper over, then fold the top left and right corners down to meet the center line.
Open the small gaps of the folded corners and squash them into triangles, then make a mountain fold along the border between the green and white sections.
Finally, tuck the remaining white corners inward to round out the shape of the tomato—and you’re done!



