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Fold the Forest

Seven pieces. One forest. Build it together.

A complete, display-quality origami fall forest diorama built from seven tutorials. The finished scene has two trees, two bears, two frogs, two butterflies, two mushrooms, multiple leaves, and scattered acorns.

fold the forest origami

Fold the Forest is a 7-part origami series where every single piece belongs to the same fall scene. You fold them one at a time and build a complete forest diorama as you go. Bears, frogs, butterflies, mushrooms, leaves, acorns, and two full trees.

The thing I love most about this one: the leaf tutorial does double duty. The same folds you scatter on the forest floor also go on the tree branches. You learn one technique and it shows up in two places in the finished scene. Nothing is waste

It is also set up perfectly for doing with kids. Each piece is one session. When you introduce the frog, you can tell them the forest has a pond now, even if you cannot see the water. When the bear arrives last, the forest is finished. There is a built-in story running through the whole series.

A few things I noticed while putting the scene together:

Fold more leaves than you think you need. You will want them for the floor AND the canopy.
Fold two of almost everything. Two mushrooms. Two butterflies. Two frogs. Two bears. The pairs are what make the scene feel like a real place, not a craft display.

The maple leaves are the colour of the whole thing. Get the oranges and reds right on those and the rest of the scene falls into place.
If you are working through this series, share your progress here as you go. Even one piece. I want to see your forest at every stage, not just the finished scene.

And if you are doing this with kids or using it in a classroom, tell me how it is going. I am curious what stories they come up with for each creature.

By the end of this series

checklist - Fold the Forest

A complete origami fall forest scene you can display as home decor through fall

checklist - Fold the Forest

Orange origami maple leaves for the tree branches and the ground beneath them

checklist - Fold the Forest

Two trees with origami canopies built from the same leaf folds that cover the for

checklist - Fold the Forest

The knowledge that one leaf tutorial can build both a tree and a forest floor

checklist - Fold the Forest

A set of fall origami projects you can return to every year

checklist - Fold the Forest

Green fan-folded leaves for the second tree and scattered across the scene

Follow the projects in order.

7 of 7 in the set · Each is a standalone make.

Beginner

Leaves

Fold a handful in two or three greens -- some for the forest floor, some for the tree canopy. Every fall forest starts here.

Beginner

The Acorn

Fold two -- one for the floor, one for a branch. In a real fall forest, acorns are everywhere.

Intermediate

The Maple Leaf

Fold a stack in orange, red, and gold -- some for the floor, some for the tree. This is where the forest becomes fall.

Beginner

The Mushroom

Fold two in different colours -- a brown cap and a red one -- and place them in the mid-ground. Ask your child who might live underneath.

Beginner

The Butterfly

Fold two in contrasting colours and suspend them above the scene. They bring the only movement to a still forest.

Beginner

The Frog

This tutorial gives you two methods -- fold both. The forest has a pond now, even if you cannot see the water.

Beginner

The Bear

Fold two in different shades of brown and place the larger one in the centre. Everything else orbits around it.

Questions before you start

What makes this different from just following seven separate origami tutorials?

Every piece in this series is designed to belong to the same scene. The leaf tutorial builds both the forest floor and the tree canopy. The frog tutorial gives you two different frogs for the pond edge. The mushroom tutorial gives you two different mushrooms for the mid-ground. When you follow this as a series, you end up with a complete diorama that looks like it was designed, not assembled from random searches.

What age is this series for?

Tutorials of leaves, acorn, mushroom work well for children aged 6 and up with a parent or teacher alongside. Other tutorials (leaves, acorn, maple leaf, mushroom) work well for children aged 6 and up with a parent or teacher alongside.

How do I use this in a classroom?

One tutorial per session. Start with the leaves in session one and have students build the forest floor. Add the acorn in session two. By session seven when the bear arrives, there is a complete forest on every desk -- or one large shared forest if the class folds together. Tell the story of each creature when you introduce its tutorial. The frog lives near the pond. The bear is fattening up for winter. The butterfly is on its way south. The educational layer is built into the structure.

How do I display the finished scene?

Set a sheet of blue card or paper as the backdrop for the sky and a sheet of green for the ground. Arrange the trees at the back, animals and mushrooms in the middle, frogs and acorns at the front. The whole scene fits on a shelf, a console table, or a window ledge. It photographs beautifully and holds up as home decor through October and November.

Do I need special paper?

Standard origami paper in autumn colours gives the most satisfying result. Orange and red for the maple leaves and tree, green for the other leaves and frogs, brown for the bears, red and white for the mushrooms. If you only have plain paper, colouring with marker or using coloured copy paper works fine. The colours in this scene are what make it read as autumn.

o I have to make multiples of each piece?

No, but the scene looks better with them. One bear is fine. Two bears in different sizes and colours tell a better story. One frog is fine. The jumping frog and the sitting frog together give the pond edge the life it deserves. Fold one of everything first and see how the scene feels. Then add more wherever it looks sparse.

Are the videos free?

Yes. Every tutorial in this series has a free step-by-step video on the blog. Printable origami paper templates in the right autumn colours for this scene are available inside Craftaholic Community, which is free to join.

Community space open

Join makers doing this series right now.

Share your version, ask questions, and make your way through the series together.

The set is complete.

Save this page as your home base, then choose the next tutorial when you are ready.