Shikigami

Shikigami (式神, shikigami or 式の神, shiki-no-kami) are creatures introduced after Haku's raid on Zeniba's residence in the Japanese animated film Spirited Away. They are first assumed to be birds by Chihiro Ogino.

Appearance
Shikigami, in traditional Japanese folklore, are either invisible or appear in the shape of neatly folded paper mannikins. However in the film's adaptation the Shikigami are portrayed as fully visible semi-humanoid paper creatures with the ability to fly at extremely high speeds (on par with Haku in his dragon form). They are white in color and resemble birds with a circular head, wings and a pointed "tail". When magically commanded, they can stand (or hover) on the tips of their tail and plaster themselves on a person's body.

Attributes
In the film the Shikigami are portrayed as emotionless creatures acting under the will of whoever commands them (Zeniba, in the film's only case). They appear to show no signs of human expression, but are incapable of moving after their fragile paper bodies are torn. While seemingly harmless alone, the Shikigami have proved to harm Haku when chasing him in troves and can also project the image of their magical conjurer. This ethereal image can cast magical spells even as a projection, but will immediately split apart and fade away after the Shikigami in which the image is projected from is ripped to shreds.

Trivia

 * While they may be spirits in traditional Japanese folklore, it is unknown whether the Shikigami mentioned in Spirited Away are living beings or mere magical tools. Therefore, they can be classified as both a spirit and an object of use.