Paper Crafts Origami Beginner Origami

How to Make an Origami Cone to Hold Pop Corn

The origami cone is an easy paper folding project with many uses, including serving snacks, entertaining children, and help you decorate for a party. If you appreciate practical origami projects, this design is worth memorizing.

  • 01 of 08

    How to Make an Origami Cone

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    The origami cone in this tutorial uses 8 1/2-inch x 11-inch paper. You could use plain white copy paper, draw a design on the paper, buy colored construction paper, buy patterned scrapbook paper, or print off the free origami paper design of your choice. Canon Creative Park has a large selection of free printable 8 1/2-inch x 11-inch origami paper.

  • 02 of 08

    Create the Initial Folds

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    Fold the paper in half horizontally. If your paper has a pattern on one side, start with the pattern face down. Crease well, then unfold. Fold the top left and bottom right corners into the middle. When you're finished, your paper should look like the photo.

  • 03 of 08

    Fold in Half

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    Fold the left side of the paper underneath the right side. Crease well.

  • 04 of 08

    Fold the Bottom Right Corner Up

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    Fold the bottom right corner up to meet the left vertical edge. When you are finished with this step of the project, your paper should look like the photo.

    Continue to 5 of 8 below
  • 05 of 08

    Fold the Top Right Corner Down

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    Fold the top right corner down so it meets the left vertical edge of the paper. When you are finished with this step of the project, your paper should look like the photo.

  • 06 of 08

    Finish Your Origami Cone

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    Gently open the pocket created at the top to round out the opening of the cone. Congratulations! Your origami cone is complete.

    A single cone is good for serving popcorn, chips, party mix, or other snacks at a party. Just avoid using the cone for anything that is wet or extremely greasy, since the paper won't hold up well under these conditions.

  • 07 of 08

    Make an Origami Hat

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    If you tuck the top pointed flap of the cone inside, it makes a fun party hat for a stuffed animal. This would be a cute project to do with children who are learning origami. They can use the hats to pretend they are having a birthday party for their favorite teddy bear.

  • 08 of 08

    An Origami Christmas Decoration

    Origami Cone

    The Spruce / Dana Hinders

    If you want, you can combine several cones to make a fun holiday decoration. The example in this photo uses red and green cones hot glued around an old CD that provides stability for the design while giving you a convenient way to hang the finished project on the wall. An origami medallion folded from two shades of green notepaper accents the center, along with a red snowflake sticker. By using different colored or patterned papers and changing the center embellishment, you could adapt this idea to fit nearly any celebration.