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Seasons > Mother’s Day > Mother’s Day Decorations > Decorate for Mother’s Day with cards your children have made

A welcome sign with seasonal decorations that are changed every month can send a subtle hint to your family: Mother’s Day is coming soon!


This unfinished wooden message board was purchased at a 100 yen store, stained, then painted  white, and finally, “Welcome Friends” written on it. The seasonal decorations are all made from a light weight air drying modeling compound such as Hearty (Karui Kaminenedo) and hung from tiny clothes pins glued to the back of the board, also sold at 100 yen stores. If you are going to change the decorations every month, you want it to be simple, or it will stay one season all year long.


view welcome sign with year round decorations

Here are just a few decorating ideas for Mother’s Day that won’t make you feel silly because you will be displaying things your children have made for you.  And if you involve your children in decorating and doing things for Father’s Day, birthdays, and Christmas, it should take just a few hints to get your children inspired for Mother’s Day, too. So, here are some gentle hints to get them going.

If your child has given you any hand made gifts in the past, this is the time to dig them out of storage, and display again with pride. Tell your child how much you like it, and how glad you are that he took the time and effort to make it for you, and how it makes you feel loved. It is also fun to show them their growth and development if you point out how much bigger his hand is than when he made it, or how much more detail she includes in her artwork than she used to.


Displaying it shows the value you give the items, and the message won’t be lost. However, if you give verbal messages as well, the learning increases exponentially. And who knows--once they realize how much you like it, they might just want to make you something again.

Decorate with mother’s day cards from past years--on the refrigerator, on a book shelf in front of books, on a windowsill, or on the piano. The cards your children start out making when they are young are not this pretty--these were made by teenagers. But save them anyway, and keep them in a notebook with clear plastic sleeves (sold at 100 yen stores.) You will enjoy re-reading their love letters to you, and they will enjoy looking at their past handiwork. When they realize how much you love their notes and cards, they will be sure to write again!

Look for photos of each of your children with you, and put them in inexpensive frames. If you are the photographer in the family, you may not find any photos. So make mother’s day a day to make sure these photos are taken--you will really appreciate it in 10 or 15 years, since you can’t go back in time to take them if you missed the opportunity the first time around. I have so few, I wish I had asked someone to take those pictures.

If you use a special plate on your children’s birthdays, and other noteworthy days,  they are very likely to think of using it to honor you. It doesn’t have to say, “You are special.” It can be any plate that is unlike any other you have, and that is only used on special occasions. It is how it is used that makes it special, not what it looks like. It can be a red plate, or one with hearts on it--it doesn’t have to be expensive--one from the 100 yen store or flee market is just as good as an expensive one. My teenage son still talks about how honored he felt whenever he was presented with the “Special” plate.  If you want to try your hand at designing your own, there are companies that sell kits--you draw a design on paper, send it to them, and they make the plate and send it back to you. Or, you might be able to find a shop where you can paint your own design on ceramic plates, then go back and pick it up once it has been fired.

Another way to display cards is to hang them as if they are flowers. Some hundred yen stores sell these ready made. If you can’t find any, buy long bamboo skewers, tiny wooden clothespins,  florist’s wire, and beads at the hundred yen store. Run the wire through the hole in the clothespin, thread beads on, and wrap the ends around the end of the skewer. If you want to, add a large bead at the other end. Put them in a vase, and hang cards and photos from them.

One of the easiest ways to display cards is to lay a ribbon on the floor, fasten the cards to the ribbon with tiny clothespins, then drape the whole thing over the top of the door so that both sides of the door are decorated. Both sides need to weigh about the same so that the ribbon doesn’t slide to one side. These clothespins came with cute little felt flowers glued to them (from the 100 yen store, of course.) They would be easy enough to make yourself if you can only find plain clothespins.

Seasons > Mother’s Day > Mother’s Day Decorations