Ideas for Winter-Themed Crafts and Bulletin Board Projects for 5-Year-Olds
By the time children are five, they handle scissors and glue more smoothly, and the range of craft activities expands dramatically.
Why not enjoy some winter-themed crafts together with your five-year-olds?
We’ve gathered plenty of ideas inspired by events like Christmas, New Year’s, and Setsubun, as well as winter-specific items like snowmen and mittens.
Encourage projects that let children freely express the worlds they imagine and experience a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction.
Since we treat what the children make as works (art pieces), we refer to them as “seisaku” (creations) in the main text.
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- Easy Winter-Themed Origami Ideas for 5-Year-Olds
- Fun January Crafts! A Collection of Ideas You Can Make and Play With for 5-Year-Olds
- [Childcare] Winter Projects You’ll Want to Try! Recommended Craft Ideas
- [For 5-year-olds] Recommended for Christmas! A collection of fun crafts to make
- December craft ideas! A collection of childcare activities to enjoy with Christmas and winter themes
- [For 4-year-olds] Winter craft ideas to enjoy at daycare and kindergarten
- [For 3-year-olds] Winter craft activities and bulletin board decoration ideas for use in childcare
- [Kindergartners (Older Group)] Folding is Fun! Recommended January Origami Idea Collection for Senior Kindergarteners
- For older kindergarteners: Let’s make it! A collection of recommended origami ideas for February
- For 4-Year-Olds: January Crafts! A Collection of Fun Ideas with Winter and New Year Themes
- [For 1-year-olds] Fun to make! A collection of winter craft activity ideas for use in childcare
[For 5-year-olds] A collection of craft play and wall display ideas that feel like winter (21–30)
Roly-poly toy with a Christmas motif

Let’s make a winter-perfect roly-poly toy using an empty capsule from a gashapon machine.
First, remove the capsule’s lid, place a marble in the bottom half as a weight, and secure it with tape.
Put the lid back on and wrap the outside with white vinyl tape.
Then, attach a snowman face made from construction paper.
Finally, use cut pieces of colored tape to create a scarf and chest decorations, and you’re done! Besides a snowman, you can also make your favorite motifs like a reindeer or Santa Claus.
Easy! Long-tailed Tit Origami

Adorably round! The long-tailed tit known as the Shima-enaga, a wild bird native to Hokkaido.
In recent years, we often see goods and items featuring its cute appearance as a motif.
Here’s an idea to make a Shima-enaga using a single sheet of origami paper, plus a pen and glue.
Once you’ve folded the creases, the base is done.
Making the wings and tail seems like something you could enjoy while teaching and learning together with friends or teachers! It could be fun to give it a smiling expression, too.
If you display the finished pieces lined up on a branch, like real Shima-enaga keeping warm together, both kids and adults are sure to feel soothed.
Make It with Resist Painting! Gloves and Hat

Are you familiar with the crayon-resist technique? It’s a method where you paint watercolor over a drawing made with white crayon, and the paint is repelled by the crayon so the drawing emerges.
Because you can barely see what you’ve drawn in white crayon, applying the paint can lead to surprisingly delightful results.
Try drawing on colored construction paper cut into winter-themed shapes like scarves, hats, and gloves.
If you plan to display the artwork, you can mount it on a backing board afterward.
Let’s make a sugoroku (board) game

This is a handmade sugoroku board game that combines prompts the children came up with.
Write each prompt on a card and stick it onto the board.
Using words or drawings, you can create a unique, original sugoroku.
Arrange the cards on the board, glue them down, and connect each card with lines—then it’s complete! With unique prompts on each space, such as “sing a song,” “jump,” “rock-paper-scissors with the teacher,” or “do an impression,” this original sugoroku will make time at the preschool lively and fun.
Snowy world of friendly penguins

Let’s create a snowy world with cute penguins! It’s recommended for 5-year-olds.
You’ll need a backing sheet, construction paper, five sheets of origami paper, glue, crayons, and round stickers.
First, make the penguin with origami.
Fold the origami into a triangle twice and align it at the center, then follow the crease to sharpen the tip and fold it diagonally.
Fold the tip back to make the beak.
Turn it over and fold it in half, then fold up the bottom and pull the face slightly forward to complete the penguin.
Next, let’s make the glacier.
First, tear larger pieces of silver, blue, and white origami by hand, draw snowflakes with crayons on construction paper and cut them out.
On light blue construction paper, glue on the glacier, penguin, and snowflakes in that order, then draw falling snow with crayons.
Add eyes to the penguin with round stickers, and you’re done!
Make it with straw stamps! Snowman craft

Let’s make a snowman wall art with straw stamps.
First, an adult draws large and small circles on construction paper.
Using a plate as a guide is fun, too.
Then, draw a snowman’s hat on colored construction paper or origami paper.
Have the child cut it out.
Glue the cut-out pieces onto a darker-colored construction paper.
Once they’re glued, draw the snowman’s face with crayons.
For the straw stamp, cut slits into the end of a straw and spread them out so it forms a flower shape.
Dip it in white paint and dab it on—this creates lovely snowflake-like prints.
Spins great! A top made from a paper cup

Why not open up a paper cup and make a well-spinning top? You will need a paper cup, markers, origami paper, and so on.
First, mark the rim of the paper cup into eight equal sections.
Cut along the marks, but don’t cut all the way—leave a little uncut.
Once you’ve made the cuts, fold them and spread them out.
Trim off the tips and decorate with markers or similar.
A continuous pattern may look nicer when it spins.
Next, fold the shaft using origami paper.
Fit the shaft into the bottom (underside) of the paper cup, and you’re done.


