All Paper, All Useful, All Cute

Most DIY school supply tutorials eventually ask you to buy something — a specific type of foam, a roll of washi tape, a particular craft tool. This collection is different. Every project here is made primarily from paper: A4 sheets, cardstock scraps, old greeting cards, and the kind of coloured paper that already lives in most households. The occasional extras — a dab of glue, a sticker, a marker — are things you almost certainly already own.

The ten projects range from genuinely functional (a working paper soap, a phone stand, a desk organiser) to beautifully decorative (an orange slice ruler, an aesthetic bookmark). All of them are beginner-level — no special equipment, no measuring precision required, and most can be completed in under thirty minutes.

📄 Paper Types Used
Soft A4 coloured paper (for soap sheets and rolls), hard cardstock or greeting card board (for rulers, bookmarks, box lids), and standard white A4 (for note slips and covers). Knowing which type to use before starting each project saves restarts.

DIY 1 · Paper Soap Sheets in a Mini Bottle

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Project 01 · Functional · Great for travel and school bags

Portable soap you can actually use

This is the most satisfying project of the ten because it produces something that genuinely works as soap. Soft paper is coated in liquid soap or shampoo, dried, cut into small shapes, and stored in a repurposed toothbrush case. Add water, rub between your palms, and it lathers just like the real thing.

Soft coloured A4 paper Shampoo or liquid soap Small brush Empty toothbrush case Hard paper strip (cap) Glitter tape + stickers

Step by Step

  • 1Lay the soft paper flat. Use a brush to spread shampoo or liquid soap evenly across the entire sheet — every section needs coverage. Repeat with a second sheet if you want more pieces.
  • 2Leave to dry for around one hour. The paper will look wet but feel completely dry once done, with a slightly different texture from untreated paper.
  • 3While it dries, make the bottle. An empty toothbrush case works perfectly — the shape is already bottle-like. Cut a strip of hard paper, roll it to match the opening diameter, and glue it into a round cap. Wrap the cap in glitter tape for a shiny finish.
  • 4Fold the dried paper into three layers and use a marker cap as a circle template. Trace and cut as many circles as fit — heart or star shapes work equally well.
  • 5Fill the case with the cut pieces, close the cap, and decorate the outside with a sticker.
✅ To Use
Take 5–6 pieces, wet your hands slightly, and rub the paper between your palms. It dissolves and lathers immediately. Perfect for school, picnics, and travel — no liquid bottle to leak in your bag.

DIY 2 · Orange Slice Ruler

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Project 02 · Functional · Upcycled greeting card

A ruler that's too cute to put away

The base is made from the white cardstock inside an old wedding or greeting card — already thick and stiff, which makes it ideal for a ruler. Four layers of this paper glued together create a firm, straight edge. Cut into a half-circle shape, coloured in sections to look like an orange slice, outlined in silver pen, and marked with measurements on one edge. Functional and completely unique.

Old greeting card (thick inside paper) Orange colouring pen or paint Silver pen Ruler + pencil + scissors
  • 1Cut four equal rectangles from the greeting card insert. Glue all four layers together firmly for a stiff base.
  • 2Draw a half-circle on the layered cardstock and cut it out. Add segment lines inside to create the orange slice pattern.
  • 3Fill the segments with orange colour and outline the entire shape in silver pen for a clean, finished look.
  • 4Mark measurements along the straight edge using a ruler and fine pen. Done.

DIY 3 · Aesthetic Checkered Bookmark

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Project 03 · Decorative · Upcycled greeting card

The bookmark that makes you want to read more

Two rectangles of greeting card paper glued back to back make the base. A hand-drawn grid of straight lines creates a classic checkered pattern. Three heart shapes are drawn and carefully cut out to create a negative-space design. Red beads and half-beads are added for texture and colour. Simple to make, genuinely pretty to use.

Greeting card paper (2 rectangles) Fine-tip pen (for grid) Red beads / half-beads Craft glue
  • 1Glue two cardstock rectangles together for a sturdy double-sided base.
  • 2Draw a tight grid of horizontal and vertical lines across the surface to create the checkered pattern.
  • 3Draw three hearts in a column and carefully cut them out.
  • 4Glue red beads around the heart cutouts and add half-beads across the surface for a tactile, dimensional finish.

DIY 4 · Clay Character Pen

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Project 04 · Makeover · Uses clay + any plain pen

Turn a boring pen into a character piece

Any cheap ballpoint pen can be completely transformed with air-dry clay. Mix red and white clay for a soft pink, roll it evenly around the pen body, and smooth the surface. While the clay is still workable, shape a small character face — Hello Kitty, a simple animal, or any character you like — and press small clay flowers or shapes along the lower section. Once dry, the clay hardens and the pen is ready to use.

Any plain ballpoint pen Air-dry clay (red + white) Small shaping tools or toothpick
🎨 Customise It
Any character works — a simple animal face, a flower, or an abstract pattern. Keep the clay layer thin and even around the grip area so the pen still feels comfortable to hold and write with.

DIY 5 · Origami Pencil Box

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Project 05 · Functional · Pure paper folding

No scissors, no glue — just folds

A square sheet of paper folded into a box with a separate lid. The base box is folded first from one square sheet; the lid is made from a slightly larger square in a contrasting colour. The lid is decorated with a simple smiley face drawn in marker. Lightweight, surprisingly sturdy for everyday use, and easily replaceable when it wears out — just fold a new one. A dab of glue on the inside corners extends the life significantly if needed.

2 square sheets (different colours) Marker pen (for decoration) Craft glue (optional)
📏 Size Tip
The lid sheet needs to be about 5mm larger than the base sheet on each side to fit over it cleanly. Measure both before starting to fold to avoid a lid that's too tight or too loose.

DIY 6 · Colourful Paper Roll Pen Holder

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Project 06 · Functional · Best for desk organisation

A rainbow pen holder made from rolled paper strips

Coloured A4 paper cut in half, rolled tightly, and trimmed to 11cm produces the building blocks for this holder. Seven colours, four rolls each, layered in alternating horizontal and vertical rows on a cardboard base. The cross-direction layering is the key structural detail — it makes the holder rigid enough to hold pens, markers, and pencils without collapsing.

A4 coloured paper (7 colours) Small square cardboard base White paper (base cover) Craft glue + scissors + ruler
  • 1Cut each A4 sheet in half. Roll each half tightly and trim to 11cm. Make 4 rolls per colour — 28 total across 7 colours.
  • 2Cover the cardboard base with white paper. Glue white rolls along all four edges to form a frame.
  • 3Glue the coloured rolls in rows, alternating direction each time: one row horizontal, next row vertical. This cross-layering is what makes the structure strong.
  • 4Arrange colours in rainbow order or group by colour — both look great.

DIY 7–10 · Quick Builds for Your Desk

The remaining four projects are faster builds — each takes under twenty minutes and solves a specific desk-organisation problem.

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DIY 7 · Paper Notes Stand
Fold a yellow square sheet into a standing frame, add purple side panels for structure, and fill with small A4 slips cut to size. Write to-do lists, reminders, or daily notes. A paper-only sticky note holder for your desk.
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DIY 8 · 3-in-1 Matchbox Stationery Kit
Open a matchbox flat and refold it into a three-section case. Cover in white paper, then hard card for the outer covers. Glue a sharpener to one side, an eraser to the other, and add a paper strip lock. Fits a small ring notebook too. Pocket-sized and genuinely functional.
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DIY 9 · 1-Minute Paper Phone Stand
Use hard paper — thin card rather than standard A4. Fold to create a base and a rear support, then shape the front ledge to hold a phone at viewing angle. The whole process takes about sixty seconds once you know the fold sequence. Stable enough for watching videos hands-free.
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DIY 10 · Tri-Colour Mini Desk Organiser
Fold three square sheets — yellow, green, red — into identical open-top pockets using the same fold pattern. Connect them side by side and glue the bases down. The result is a three-compartment tray for erasers, paper clips, tape, and small stationery. Takes about fifteen minutes and keeps the desk clear.
💡 For Boxes and Stands
Projects 8, 9, and 10 all benefit from using the stiffest paper available. Cereal box card, old hardback book covers, or the backing boards from writing pads all work well as the structural layer. The softer the paper, the faster it loses its shape with use.

Tips That Apply to All Paper DIYs

  • Know your paper type. Soft paper folds and absorbs; hard card holds shape. Using the wrong type is the most common reason a project doesn't hold up.
  • Score before folding. For clean, straight folds in card, run a blunt tool (or an empty pen) along a ruler before folding. It makes the crease precise and prevents tearing.
  • Glue sparingly. Too much glue warps paper. Apply thin layers, press firmly, and allow each glued section to dry before adding the next.
  • Upcycle first. Old greeting cards, envelopes, magazine pages, and packaging are all fair game. The orange slice ruler and the aesthetic bookmark both come from greeting card inserts.
  • Longevity. Paper projects last longer when they are kept dry and handled carefully. A thin layer of clear nail polish or mod podge over finished surfaces adds meaningful water resistance.