Origami Magazine

Menu
  • Home
  • About us
  • Resources
  • Send Origami
  • Contact
Home
Origami Stars
Origami Lucky Star Instructions

Origami Lucky Star Instructions

TwitterFacebookMessengerPinterestPrintWhatsApp

PinFollow the instructions below to make this Origami Lucky Star
Difficulty: Easy-Medium

Long time ago in Japan, there was a little girl named Hoshi who was fascinated by the stars of the sky. She was absolutely in awe of them and would lie on the grass at night and stare at them for hours, wondering how the little bright specks of light can stay in the air for so long.

One night while watching the stars, something happened in the sky that made her sad and she began to cry. The stars were falling out of heaven like a shower. So many of them were falling that she was afraid there would be no more.

Suddenly she had an idea. Hoshi ran home and came back with a jar and some paper, and she sat down to watch the stars again. For every star that fell, Hoshi made a paper star and placed it in the jar. That night, she made one hundred stars. However, she was still sad because many more fell from the sky and she wasn’t able to fold them all.


The next night, there were only a few stars in the sky. Hoshi was worried, but she had just one more idea. She ran and knocked on all the doors in the village and told all the little boys and girls to come out. She explained to them what was happening and they all wanted to help. That night they made two thousand stars and every kid placed their own stars in their own jar.

And then something magical happened. More stars began to appear in the sky and all the little boys and girls were happy. Hoshi spoke and said, “These stars are lucky because of us. From now on, these paper stars will be called lucky stars.” Hoshi then looked up at the sky and said, “Whenever a lucky star is made, a falling star is saved.”

The little boys and girls have all grown up now and to this day, still make lucky stars and place them in a jar. Although they have brought luck to the falling stars, some say that the stars have brought luck to them.

“Whenever a lucky star is made, a falling star is saved.”

Story by OrigamiMag.com

Thanks to a fellow folder for this useful tip: You can just pinch the corners if you have a hard time puffing them up to the directions.

Step 1: Start with strip of paper or ribbon. To cut out a straight strip of paper, first fold a small strip and then cut with scissors.
PinPin

Step 2: Tie a knot at the top as shown.
PinPin

Step 3: Flatten the knot (Make sure the knot is not loose).
Pin

Step 4: Tuck the loose end into the pocket of the knot.

Pin
Pin

Step 5: Fold the long leftover strip along the edge of the pentagon shape.
Pin

Step 6: Again, fold the loose strip along the edge of the pentagon.
Pin

Step 7: Keep folding along the edge to wrap the strip around and around the pentagon until there’s only a short strip leftover.
Pin

Step 8: Tuck the loose end into the pocket.

Pin
Pin

Step 9: Use your fingernails to carefully poke in the sides of the pentagon so that the star will puff up.
Pin

Step 10: Once you are done with all sides, your origami lucky star is complete. Now have fun folding a lot of different color stars.
Pin

Click on “Like” below if you like the lucky star!

TwitterFacebookMessengerPinterestPrintWhatsApp
Prev Article
Next Article
Tags:Easy-Medium

Related Articles

Pin
Follow the instructions below to make this Origami Ninja Star …

Origami Ninja Star Instructions

Pin
Follow the instructions below to make this Origami Star Box …

Origami Star Box Instructions

Pin
Follow the instructions below to make this Origami Transforming Ninja …

Origami Transforming Ninja Star with 8 points

Pin
Learn how to fold an origami star with instructions below. …

How to Make an Origami Star Instructions

Categories

  • Easy Origami
  • Origami Animals
  • Origami Birds
  • Origami Boxes
  • Origami Flowers
  • Origami Hearts
  • Origami Stars
  • Origami Toys
  • Paper Airplanes
  • Resources

Featured Origami

Pin

How to Make an Origami Basket with Handle

Pin

Origami Star Box Instructions

Pin

Origami Nik-Nak Box

Advertising

Origami Magazine

About OrigamiMag.com

Origami Magazine is here to share the fun and awesomeness of creating origami with you. We do our best to create origami instructions that you can follow. Have fun folding and tell all your friends about OrigamiMag!

Latest Origami

  • Skyshelter.zip – An Origami-Inspired Skyscraper
  • Pteroplane Paper Airplane
  • Uranus Arc III Paper Airplane

Origami by difficulty:

Easy (43) Easy-Medium (9) Hard (2) Medium (43)
Copyright © 2023 Origami Magazine
Home - About Us -  Terms - Privacy Policy - Resources - Contact