Make A Pop-up Card
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Make a pop-up greeting card using paper, scissors, glue, and simple folds, decorate it creatively, and personalize it for someone special.

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Step-by-step guide to make a pop-up card

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How to MAKE a POP UP CARD!! - (Easy for Kids!)

What you need
Adult supervision required, coloring materials, eraser, glue stick, paper, pencil, ruler, scissors, stickers or scrap paper for decorations

Step 1

Choose one special person to make the card for.

Step 2

Pick a sheet of paper for the card.

Step 3

Fold the paper in half to make a card.

Step 4

With the card folded, use the ruler and pencil to draw two parallel horizontal lines about 5 cm long and 2 cm apart near the center fold for the pop-up cuts.

Step 5

Cut along the pencil lines with scissors while the card is still folded to make the pop-up tab.

Step 6

Open the card so the inside lies flat.

Step 7

Push the cut tab inward so it forms a pop-up rectangle.

Step 8

Crease the new folds flat so the pop-up stands neatly when the card opens.

Step 9

Cut a small shape from scrap paper to be your pop-up character or object.

Step 10

Decorate the pop-up shape with coloring materials and stickers.

Step 11

Glue the bottom of the pop-up shape onto the front of the pop-up tab inside the card.

Step 12

Decorate the outside and the rest of the inside of the card with coloring materials and stickers.

Step 13

Write a short personal message inside for the person you chose.

Step 14

Share your finished pop-up card on DIY.org.

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

Complete & Share
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Help!?

What can we use instead of a ruler, pencil, scissors, or glue if we don't have them?

Use a book edge or credit card as a ruler, a pen or marker to draw the two parallel horizontal lines near the center fold, child-safe scissors or carefully torn paper to make the pop-up cuts, and a glue stick or double-sided tape to attach the scrap-paper pop-up shape.

What should I do if the pop-up tab won't fold correctly or the card tears when I make the cuts?

Check that you only cut the two 5 cm lines while the card is folded, push the cut tab inward and firmly re-crease the new folds flat so the pop-up rectangle sits neatly, and shorten or reinforce the tab edge with scrap paper if the card begins to tear before gluing the pop-up shape.

How can I change the activity for younger or older kids?

For younger children (3–5) have an adult pre-fold the card and pre-cut a larger pop-up tab and use big stickers and crayons to decorate, for 6–8 let kids measure and cut the 5 cm lines with supervision, and for 9+ challenge them to add multiple pop-up tabs and detailed decorations using rulers and colored paper.

How can we make the pop-up card more special or more complex?

Add extra pop-up tabs by repeating the two parallel cuts in other places, layer several scrap-paper shapes onto each tab, use patterned paper, stickers, or small photos for decoration, write a longer personal message, or make a movable element with a paper brad before sharing the finished card on DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to make a pop-up card

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Easy Pop Up Card Tutorial for Beginners

4 Videos

Facts about paper crafts for kids

āœ‚ļø Pop-up cards use "paper engineering"—clever folds, cuts, and tabs—to turn flat paper into surprising 3D scenes.

ā¤ļø Handmade cards feel extra special—personalized decorations and messages make them keepsakes many people treasure.

🧩 Kirigami (cut paper) and origami (folding) are paper-art cousins—kirigami’s cuts make many pop-up shapes possible.

šŸ’” Simple pop-up mechanisms like the V-fold, box pop-up, and sliding tab are beginner-friendly but deliver big "wow" moments.

šŸŽ‰ Victorian England helped popularize decorated greeting cards, turning card-sending into a festive social tradition.

How do I make a simple pop-up greeting card?

Start with a folded cardstock base. Mark and cut two parallel slits about 1–2 inches apart along the center fold to form a tab. Fold the tab inward so it pops out when the card opens. Glue a paper shape (heart, animal, or message) to the front of the tab, then close the card to check it folds flat. Decorate the inside and outside, add a personal note, and let glue dry. Supervise scissors use for younger kids.

What materials do I need to make a pop-up card?

You’ll need folded cardstock or construction paper for the card base, scissors, and glue (glue stick or craft glue). Add colored paper or scrapbooking paper for pop-up pieces, markers or crayons, stickers, and a pencil and ruler for measuring. Optional extras include photos, decorative tape, glitter (use sparingly), and child-safe scissors. Choose low-odor glue and washable markers for younger children.

What ages is making a pop-up card suitable for?

This activity suits ages about 5–12. Children 5–7 can make simple pop-up tabs with adult help for cutting and measuring. Ages 8–12 can try more intricate mechanisms like layered pops or pull tabs and decorate independently. Toddlers can participate by sticking pre-cut shapes and decorating the outside under supervision. Adjust complexity, tools, and supervision to match each child’s fine motor skills and attention span.

What are the benefits of making pop-up cards?

Making pop-up cards builds fine motor skills, spatial awareness, and following step-by-step instructions. It encourages creativity, planning, and personal expression as kids design and write messages. The project boosts confidence by producing a tangible gift and teaches patience and problem-solving when folds need adjusting. Sharing the finished card also strengthens social-emotional skills and gives children a meaningful way to show care.
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