From money envelopes to dragons, here are the best Chinese New Year crafts for preschoolers and beyond

We’re squealing with excitement over the upcoming Lunar New Year. This family-centric celebration starts on the first day of the new moon on the Lunar Calendar, and we’ve searched high and low for ways to involve the whole crew. From paper lanterns and red envelopes to lunar calendars and more, find your favorite Chinese New Year crafts to celebrate the Year of the Dragon. We’ve also got fun dragon crafts for kids!

Toilet Paper Roll Dragon

Make this amazing dragon craft with the simplest materials. Tissue paper, pom poms, a toilet paper tube, glue, and googly eyes are all you need for this craft, but let your kiddo be creative and use whatever they’d like.

Origami Rabbit

Chinese new year crafts
Easy Peasy and Fun

It's the Year of the Rabbit! Celebrate the lunar new year with this adorable origami rabbit craft from Easy Peasy and Fun.

Chinese Lanterns

Happiness is Homemade

Light up your new year with these simple sparkle Chinese lanterns made from colored paper, jewel stickers, tape, and glue. Put them up in pairs, but remember—four is an unlucky number! If your little crafter is on a roll, eight lanterns strung together are lucky and bring wealth. Heidi over at Happiness is Homemade gives us the how-to-do.

 

Chinese New Year Craft Firecrackers

This Lunar New Year craft sparkles and shines! You can find most of what you need at home, but be sure to click the picture to see the details.

Related: 14 Asian Food Recipes You’ll Think Are Takeout

Paper Dragon

Allison McDonald via No Time for Flashcards

Your little reveler can bring good luck and have fun creating this paper dragon craft. It's easy to make with things from around the house: paper, paint, a rolling pin, bubble wrap, and googly eyes. Psst ... this can be an afternoon activity if you make a really big dragon! Get the step-by-step at No Time for Flashcards.

 

Lunar Calendar

Nikki Walsh

Since the Chinese Calendar is based on the lunar calendar with each month beginning on the first day of the new moon, have your little ones fill out the different phases to see where the New Year's month begins. You’ll need a calendar, circle stickers, and scissors. Find a quick tutorial, here.

 

Accordion Tangerine

Buggy and Buddy

Tangerines and oranges symbolize good luck and wealth for the new year. Your little moon can bring this bright and vibrant happy color into the house with this cute Chinese New Year craft by Chelsey at Buggy and Buddy. It’s easy to make with colored paper, brown yarn, scissors, and glue. 

 

Money Envelopes

First Palette

What tot can resist those red envelopes? Usually filled with money (of even denominations) and given out at the celebratory dinners, if you have time, you and your crew can make these little envelopes and decorate them too. We love the version from Sue over at First Palette because it comes with a printable template!  

 

Cherry Blossom Fans

In the Playroom

Lunar New Year is also known as the Spring Festival, so what better way to celebrate than by letting your little artist finger-paint cherry blossoms on Chinese fans? Just grab some colored paper, a black pen, paint, and tape. The instructions can be found over at In the Playroom.

Calligraphy

Chinese new year crafts
Tinkerlab

Your little scribes may not be ready to master Chinese characters, but you can still introduce them to the art of calligraphy. Once you've gathered the basic supplies of a pen, ink, and paper, you can follow Rachelle Doorley's guide over at Tinkerlab.

 

Chinese Gong

Chinese new year crafts
Kid World Citizen

Get musical by making a Chinese-inspired gong, like this one from Kid World Citizen. You can even experiment with different pan sizes for different types of sounds. 

Chinese New Year Sensory Bin

Let littles get hands-on Chinese New Year-style exploring in this sensory bin. First, color the rice red to bring good luck (A quick how-to at Little Bins for Little Hands). Then add chopsticks, old Chinese coins, teacups, spoons, Lunar New Year sayings, red envelopes, and our favorite, a Buddha. Be sure to supervise toddlers while they enjoy this fun experience.

One sunny fall morning, I watched my daughter tear open a birthday present, eager to unearth the mysterious goodies hidden inside.

“Here,” she said, tossing the card in my direction. “Could you read this to me?”

I paused for a moment. This exact scene had played out numerous times across birthdays, holidays, even reading penpal letters.

I shook my head. “No. Read it yourself.”

“I can‘t understand it,” she replied.

I studied the card once again. What? Was it written in Greek?

For years, like many parents do, I focused on making sure my daughter’s handwriting was straight, clean and as legible as possible. We perfected every descender and closed every ‘a’ so it wouldn’t resemble a ‘u’ and so on. After that we progressed to cursive but quickly gave our attention to typing skills. After all, schools across the country had started dropping cursive from their curriculums entirely.

Nearly every state in America has adopted the Common Core State Standards Initiative from 2010, which seeks to establish consistent educational standards across the U.S. and ensure high school graduates are prepared to enter college. The standards for English Language Arts include core topics of reading, writing and language and a modern section called “media and technology”. This component includes keyboard skills, but does not mandate cursive handwriting.

Spencerian script was the standard cursive writing st‌yle in the U.S. from the mid 1800s through the early 1900s. It was then simplified into the Palmer Method around the 1920s, followed by D’Nealian cursive, which students learn today. Yet the use of cursive declined overall as people first shifted to typewriters and then to personal computers. Public school instruction of cursive in the U.S. has steadily declined since the 1970s, but handwriting, penmanship and cursive continue to remain hot topics among educators and lawmakers across the nation.

Some applauded the Common Core’s move into modern times while others lamented the death of decorative penmanship. But recently, in 2016, Alabama and Louisiana passed laws mandating cursive proficiency in public schools. By doing so, they became the newest of over a dozen states now requiring cursive for 3rd graders and up.

What changed? Are parents and teachers growing sentimental about their own upbringing? Are we rebelling against the current digital shift in a grassroots back-to-basics swing to simpler, more analog times?  Even if nostalgia spurred the changes, science is there to back it up.

An article published in Psychology Today says “…learning cursive is an important tool for cognitive development.” Brain scans reveal activated neural circuitry when children print letters and then read them out loud, but the same effect does not occur when the letters are typed. The swoopy, connected st‌yle of cursive is even more demanding than printing and creates a greater neural response in both hemispheres of the brain due to it’s artistic nature.

“Cursive is also more likely to engage students by providing a sense of personal st‌yle and ownership,” the Psychology Today article explains. More and more often, today’s youngest generations struggle with hand writing correspondence and creating their own personalized signatures. As today’s youth grew up without writing in cursive, they lost the ability to read it as well. Could the decline of handwriting sever our ties to the past, to our history, to ourselves?

My daughter never had trouble reading typed materials, but if I put a handwritten document in front of her, her eyes would glaze over. The perfect schoolteacher handwriting from our cursive tracing books had done little to prepare her for real handwriting from real people.

I simply couldn’t fathom a future in which my daughter would be incapable of understanding Great Grandma Vi’s apple pie recipe, family genealogy or the Declaration of Independence. But what could we do?

A Google search for “cursive handwriting” gave dozens of search results for tracing workbooks. Another search for “cursive instruction” produced YouTube tutorials for calligraphy. Adding specific keywords such as “how to practice reading people’s handwriting” prompted solutions for ADHD kids and how to effectively teach writing skills. A proper resource didn’t seem to exist.

Thanks to the global community that is Facebook, I rallied friends, family and even strangers to contribute samples of their everyday handwriting for our cause. Using my daughter as a sounding board, we combed through nearly 200 writing images to select our favorite five dozen based on their legibility (or lack thereof), uniqueness and beauty. The short paragraphs came to us from all corners of the world, from Japan to Peru and from right- and left-handed writers, all genders and all ages.

These samples, along with a sprinkling of history and terminology, have been organized into Handwriting: A Study of Penmanship in the Digital Age, an easy-to-read, fact-filled supplement for classroom instruction and home-based reading practice. The content is entirely comprised of animal facts and is suitable for all ages.

Maggie lives with her husband and "old soul" tween daughter in the Pacific Northwest. She shares their travel adventures, field trips, and homeschool ideas from a city-based homestead. Maggie's first book, Handwriting: A Study of Penmenship in the Digital Age, is available on Amazon.

 

The calendar’s new year may have passed, but the biggest celebration of the year in many parts of the world is still to come! Celebrating and honoring family, the Chinese New Year offers families a chance to bring in some good luck for the upcoming year (tell your kids to clean the house—it’s lucky!) Find the best ways to join in on the Lunar New Year celebrations in Portland by reading on for more. Welcome the Year of the Dog in a fantastic way!

photo: liana via flickr

See the Lan Su Chinese Gardens
These Ming Dynasty style gardens are one of the premiere attractions of Chinatown and Portland. If you only go once a year, don’t miss out on their biggest celebration! Weekends from February 16th  through March 4th, you’ll find special treats like lion dances, Chinese folk art, calligraphy demonstrations, martial arts practices, and family crafts to join in. And the kids will also get the chance to add to the Wishing Tree! For a really special night, grab tickets ahead of time for the evening Lantern Viewing, where the garden glows bright with light, and a dragon procession ends the evening.

Feb. 16 through Mar. 4
Lan Su Chinese Gardens
239 NW Everett St., Portland
503-228-8131
Online: lansugarden.org

Visit the Chinese New Year Cultural Fair
This giant fair has been around for over seventeen years, celebrating the rich Chinese traditions of the Portland community! Fun for the whole family, the festival this year celebrates the Year of the Dog. Your kids will love to see the martial arts demonstrations, lots of children’s games, folk dances, and a special lion dance from the White Lotus Lion Dance Team, who perform on high poles called Jongs. Past all that, the fair is chance to taste the exciting treats from many vendors–everyone will be sure to find something they love!

Saturday, Feb 10
Oregon Convention Center
777 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. Portland
Online: portlandchinesetimes.com/2018-year-dogfair/

photo: judy via yelp

Visit Portland’s History
Portland’s Chinatown has a rich history — it was once the second-largest Chinatown in the United States! With the new Portland Chinatown Museum set to open later in 2018, you’ll have to save your curiosity for a bit later. Until then, get the family to the Portland Art Museum for it’s 4,000 artifact-strong collection of Asian artwork, like ceramics and objects found in tombs. Children 17 and under are always free.

$19.99/adults, free for children 17 and under
1219 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
503-226-2811
Online: portlandartmuseum.org

Enjoy the Library’s Lunar New Year
Multnomah County Library is not missing out on the fun of the Lunar New Year! They’ll be having a few celebrations at libraries around the county, most notably at Central. Join them for fun cultural performances, readings, snacks, and crafts for the little ones.

Sun., Feb 18, 2 – 4 p.m.
801 SW 10th Avenue
Portland, OR
503-988-5123
Online: multcolib.org/events

 

photo: Walter via flicker

Make Your Own Hong Bao
Bright red envelopes (hong bao) are traditionally given out during the Chinese New Year (especially to kids), filled with money. The red color symbolizes good luck, and the money is a wish for a prosperous year. Make your own with these instructions from the Lan Su Chinese Garden, fill them with a few coins, and have your kids give them to neighbors and friends this year!

Instructions here: lansugarden.org

What’s your favorite Lunar New Year celebration? Tell us in the comments below!

—Katrina Emery