Traditional Korean Hanji Paper Craft Workshops

Traditional Korean Hanji paper craft workshops—classes where artisans teach participants to make items like greeting cards, small boxes, and lanterns using Hanji (handmade Korean paper made from mulberry bark)—are preserving a 1,200-year-old craft while promoting eco-friendly art. Unlike regular paper (which uses wood pulp), Hanji is durable, recyclable, and made from sustainable mulberry trees.
In Seoul (South Korea) and Los Angeles (U.S.), 300+ people have joined workshops, making 800+ Hanji crafts. 19-year-old Ji-eun in Seoul said: “I made a Hanji lantern for my grandma’s birthday—she said it reminds her of the lanterns she used as a child. Hanji’s texture is so unique; it feels like holding a piece of history.” Artisans teach traditional papermaking (soaking mulberry bark, pressing it into sheets) and simple folding techniques. Workshops donate Hanji cards to hospitals, where patients use them to write letters to loved ones. These workshops prove that traditional crafts belong in modern life—Hanji isn’t just paper; it’s a piece of Korean heritage.

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