Paper Crafts for Beginners: Complete Guide

Updated 2026-05-07 · 10 tutorials

Paper crafts are the lowest-barrier entry into making things with your hands. Most projects use one sheet of paper. No tools, no glue, just folds and cuts. That accessibility is exactly why parents reach for origami when kids want a project.

This guide covers the essentials: starter supplies (less than you think), basic techniques every paper crafter uses, first project ideas, and the FAQ that always comes up.

1. Essential supplies

You'll need origami paper or square cardstock, scissors, a glue stick, and ideally a bone folder for crisp folds. That's it for 80% of projects.

Our essential paper-craft supplies guide lists each item with a specific recommendation and notes what you can skip entirely for the first few projects.

2. Basic techniques

Four operations cover most beginner paper projects:

  • Valley and mountain folds: the building blocks of all origami. Valley folds toward you; mountain folds away.
  • Squash fold and petal fold: slightly more advanced. Used in flowers and animal-shaped origami.
  • Cutting and gluing: for non-origami projects (snowflakes, paper roses, fortune tellers).
  • Scoring: pressing a guideline before folding so the crease is sharp and exactly where you want it.

3. First project ideas

Pick a project where one mistake doesn't cost much:

  • A paper airplane: 8 folds, flies on the first try. Concorde-style is the most beginner-friendly design.
  • A paper fortune teller (cootie catcher): 7 folds, total throwback. Kids will steal it.
  • An origami crane or heart: the classics. The crane is more steps but every step is well-documented.
  • A snowflake: fold + cut, no folding sequence to memorize. Great for kids.
  • A paper rose or flower: slightly more advanced; gluing required, but the result feels gift-worthy.

4. FAQ

What paper should beginners use? Standard 6×6 origami paper for animals, hearts, cranes. 8.5×11 printer paper for airplanes. Cardstock for snowflakes (folded thicker doesn't tear when cut).

Are these good for kids? Yes. Most projects in this category are 5+ friendly. Paper airplanes and fortune tellers are the easiest entry points.

Origami crane: how hard is it really? 8-12 folds depending on the diagram. Hard the first time (squash and petal folds are non-obvious), easy by the third try.

Glue stick or liquid glue? Glue stick for paper-on-paper that won't bend. Liquid glue (white school glue) for layered work that needs to flex (like rolled paper roses).

Are origami diagrams or videos better? Videos for first-timers: the squash and petal folds are easier to copy than to read. Diagrams later, once you know what to look for.

Tutorials in this guide

Paper Crafts for Beginners - Complete Step-by-Step Guide