Paper roses, paper roses … oh how real?

I have an ear worm of that song and a vision of marie osmond singing it. Never mind that though,  I am happy with the paper flowers produced in this crafting session.

The flowers look quite different depending on paper used and the container/ vase displayed in. The blue themed group are my favourites but the patterned paper flowers aren’t trying to be real and look cute.

I was determined to use up some of my craftwork cards paper stash and I set the scan n cut to work. But you could cut a similar set for each flower quite easily by hand.

5EE86A4F-36D1-4858-8438-E67BB9842876Tips

soften the paper fibres by rolling each petal around a barbecue stick or rubbing it against a bone folder

I used hot glue to form each petal layer into a cup shape but tacky glue works as well – albeit making assembly a little slower

I made a hole with my pokey tool in the centre of each glued cup then impaled a set of petals with an I-pin, a long sewing pin would work as well. Then I glued the single petals, including the rolled one, over the pin head. Some flowers have some Candi ( a small circle of paper that came with the paper pads from craftwork cards) at their centres. These were fixed with foam pads and hid the pin very well.

I stuck the pins directly into oasis in the bucket style containers and for the vase bound the pin against a length of barbecue stick. I used washi tape to bind, florist tape would have been better.

Some leaf shapes filled in the gaps in the arrangements, I needed far more flowers than I thought I would to fill the containers. Next time I will distress the leaves with ink to make them look softer.

 

Crayola cartons

IMG_0647img_0646.jpgA quick fix to box up some of the very many loose crayons I have accumulated to go to a charity drive and present them nicely (plus use up some of the acculululated washi tape.

The lid was a piece of 14.5 x 9 cm card scored at 3.2 cm in from each long side and 2 cm n from each short side then cut and trimmed as shown.

I used my Tonic trimmer which has a very handy scoring blade that makes meauring a little job like this quick and easy.

The lid was folded to shape and fixed with a length of washi and then further washi in contrast colours was stuck around the base carton to unite the top and bottom.

Washi Wednesday … part 3

5F96B15E-EEF9-4003-9433-D976EA9A7B55

 

We had a diy beauty products day and filled lots of pots and jars with creations, then decided to prettify the containers – with washi tape, of course.

My favourite is the hobbycraft bunting tape, the white background is translucent and ‘disappeared’ on the plastic pots.

We sealed the surfaces with mod podge to try and keep the washi in place until the next refill.

Washi Wednesday part 2…

F69B3112-3D60-4248-9DE8-0E1D39BBC5B2

A cheapo frame covered in washi tape is upgraded enough to display an old photo which came to light in a rummage through the albums.

Patterned washi is forgiving enough to allow for overlaps, so all the visible frame is covered and little creases can be smoothed out too. Long term I will coat this with mod podge to stop any lifting.

This green bird patterned washi came in a set from paperchase, lovely stuff. The mount is made from paper brought back from South Africa as a gift, I am told it was made principally of elephant dung!