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How to Make Simple Chinese Lanterns DIY Craft

How to Make Simple Chinese Paper Lanterns DIY Craft uses a few cuts and a fold to make festive homemade paper lanterns. Make a garland for Chinese New Year.
Prep Time5 minutes
Cook Time20 minutes
Total Time25 minutes
Course: Paper Craft
Cuisine: Craft
Keyword: Chinese lantern DIY, DIY Chinese New Year lanterns, DIY Chinese paper lanterns, family activity, hand fan paper craft, homemade paper lantern, kids craft, make a paper lantern, paper lanterns DIY
Servings: 3 Chinese Paper Lanterns
Author: Shelly
Cost: $1

Equipment

  • Scissors

Ingredients

Instructions

First paper lanterns DIY

  • The first Chinese lantern we will make will be from red copy paper and yellow copy paper (you can use other papers as well). We will use a ruler to draw out our lines to cut them and make them very accurate.
    Simple instructions for classic paper lanterns can also be found on a full length video if you want that option, click here: Full Length Tutorial for How to Make Simple Chinese Paper Lanterns DIY Craft.
    Fold your red piece of 8 ½ x 11 inch copy paper in half hotdog style.
    Take your ruler and draw pencil marks down the entire length of the folded edge of the paper at half inch increments. 
    Draw a pencil line the length of the paper on the unfolded side that is about ¾ to 1 inch from the edge.
    Then, along that line, make marks that are in half inch increments all the way down the paper.
    Turn your paper so that you can use the ruler to draw straight lines that connect the marks that you’ve made at the half inch increments. You will draw the lines from the unfolded edge to the line that you drew down the unfolded edge.
  • Now take your scissors and cut along those lines through both layers of your paper. You will cut strips from the unfolded edge just to the line that you drew on the opposite side of the paper. Because you measured the lines they will be very accurate and even. 
    When you open your paper, you’re going to roll it, so that the two short edges come together.
    Using a glue stick, put glue along the last strip on one edge. Then overlap the last strip of the other edge and glue them together.
  • Next, you’re going to cut a handle for your lantern.
    Cut a strip of paper from the red paper along one short side that’s about 1 inch wide.
    Use a glue stick, double-sided tape, or staple the two ends of that handle to the top of your lantern, making them as evenly across from one another as possible.
  • We are going to add an extra step to the lantern and make a liner that goes inside.
    Take a piece of your yellow copy paper folded in half hamburger style.
    Place the folded edge to the right, and then cut fringe all along the bottom edges of your paper through both layers. These will be small clips that you cut in the paper that are about 2 inches deep and as close together as you can make them- about an eighth of an inch or a quarter inch apart.
    After doing this, open your paper up and roll it so that the fringe is on the bottom. You’re going to glue this into a tube. You want to glue it so that you have about ¾ of an inch overlap. We’re going to be slipping this tube inside of the lantern, so it needs to be able to fit through the bottom of the lantern.
    With that done, the next step is to slip the yellow tube into your lantern so that the fringe is at the bottom of the lantern.
    Line up the top edge of the tube with the top of the lantern, and then staple it once to hold it in place.
    Push the lantern upwards so that the fringe shows out of the bottom of the lantern. Staple it once so that it stays in place.
    I love the way this looks! It makes the lantern look as if it’s lighted on the inside!
  • You can decorate the lantern in other ways- you could use washi tape, a gold paint pen, gold ribbon, or glitter glue for example! Use your imagination!

Second paper lanterns DIY

  • If you would like, you can also make your lantern without the inside tube. In the video I show making these traditional lanterns. In this option I use red card stock paper.
    Also, I do not measure and draw the lines to use to cut the strips. Just fold the piece of card stock in half hotdog style and then make snips, cutting the strips until you get about an inch from the unfolded edge. Keep cutting the strips the full width of the paper
    Without measurement lines, do your best at making the cuts as straight and even as possible. 
    Assemble the lantern as we did earlier. I stapled mine this time.
    Go ahead and add the handle and decorate as you’d like. This is the way we made them in grade school, we just left them without a liner.
  • It is fun to make a paper tassel to hang from your lantern.
    Cut a 2 ½ inch strip of yellow paper down the long side of the paper.
    Fold this in half and cut small snips into the paper close together- cutting from one edge to about ½ inch from the other edge of the paper. This will be the fringe.
    Place glue along the ½ inch side that is not clipped.
    Tightly roll the fringe up into a tassel. Isn't that cool?
    Cut a piece of thread, string, or embroidery floss that is about 2 feet long. Tie the thread to the top of the tassel so there are two equal lengths of thread on either side of the tassel.
    Tie the ends of the threads to to the handles of the lantern, one to each handle. The thread needs to be long enough so that the tassel hangs down underneath the lantern.
    This adds a great finishing touch!

Third paper lanterns DIY

  • Up for another option? How about some miniature Chinese paper lanterns? Who can resist a miniature?
    Fold another red rectangular sheet of paper in half hotdog style and cut down the fold so that you have two pieces of paper.
    Fold one piece in half hotdog style and clip your strips down into the paper cutting from the folded edge to about a half inch from the unfolded edge. 
    I cut off about 2 ½ inches from one end of the paper to make it a little smaller in length.
    Assemble your lantern just the way we did the larger ones. 

Video

Notes

If you would like for younger children, you can cut wide strips- even up to a 1-inch strip. This craft is a good learning experience for them in cutting and is a fun way to develop fine motor skills. But I must say that the narrow strips make for a more delicate looking paper lantern.
I actually went ahead and strung all of my finished lanterns together into a garland by putting a string through the handle of the lantern.