Here comes a further variation of the woven Easter egg postcard. It is so much fun to come up with ideas for weaving that I did this last woven egg with sequins added. This is for those of you who like it a bit more glamorous.
Easter Postcard with Woven Egg and sequins
Material and instruction like in Easter postcard No. 3. You also need some sequins fitting your chosen colour scheme. Proceed just as in postcard no. 3, but weave more loosely. After finishing the weaving, add the sequins. I made groups of three and spread them evenly over the egg.
All these variations are meant to show that you can let your imagination run free and come up with the most beautiful ideas yourself. Have fun!
99 sheets of white paper
... and what you can do with them
about this blog
About this Blog
Doing an illustration for my other blog, I had a very frustrating experience with new quality drawing paper which got me thinking and indeed resulted in a flood of ideas, what can be done with the 99 sheets of paper that are still left from the block. So I decided to install a whole new blog to show you the results. I hope you will enjoy them as much as I like to create the projects.
The sheets of paper I am working with are size A4 (21 x 29.7 mm), 185 g/m².
TERMS OF USE: I'm happy for you to use this tutorial to make items which you can keep, give as gifts or sell. You are not permitted to copy, resell or distribute the tutorial in any form (printed or digital). All images and texts are my own and under copyright.
Montag, 25. März 2013
Easter Postcard (4)
This Easter postcard project varies the theme and technique of Easter Postcard No. 3. It is woven again, but more colourful as you can see. I sort of liked the idea to wrap it in a warm and cosy plaid, especially as it's extremaly cold outside with biting wind and not nearly feeling like spring or Easter.
Easter Postcard with Plaid Egg
Materials and instruction see Easter Postcard No. 3, only add some more colours and weave more loosely so you can see the warp threads, too.
Easter Postcard with Plaid Egg
Materials and instruction see Easter Postcard No. 3, only add some more colours and weave more loosely so you can see the warp threads, too.
Mittwoch, 27. Februar 2013
Easter Postcards (3)
In this postcard project I covered the egg in small flowers.
Flowery Easter Postcard
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
1 sheet of pink paper
newspaper and magazine cutouts in all shades of pink, purple, red, orange
oil pastels in pale pink
spray fixative
glue
thread in several shades of pink
- Print the template.
- Cover the egg in oil pastels and mark vertical lines with a needle, beginning in the center and drawing parallels every 1.5 cm.
- Cut out flowers in shades and patterns of pink with a flower hole punch.
- Fix the flower cut-outs with tiny dots of glue along the vertical lines.
- Sew along these lines in different colours. Knot the dangling threads thoroughly on the back.
- Spread spray glue onto the pink paper and press onto the back of the postcard.
- Fold the postcard carefully with a bone folder along the middle.
Montag, 25. Februar 2013
Easter Postcard (2)
This is the second Easter postcard. I wanted to further experiment with weaving, this time in wool.
Easter Postcard With Wool Egg
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
1 sheet of green paper
mending yarn in turquoise (or another colour of your liking)
adhesive tape
spray glue
- Print the template for the egg on the white sheet of paper.
- Cover the dots with adhesive tape for more stability. This is the back side of the postcard, so it won't show.
- Pierce all the dots.
- Start weaving by doing all the vertical lines. This is the warp.
- Begin with the weft at the bottom of the egg. As you can see, I applied two different techniques: plain-weaving and twill-weaving. You can find the explanation here. To achieve the herringbone effect you have to change the direction of the warp thread you are weaving under: to let the pattern 'move' to the right, weave under the next warp thread to the right in every row, to move to the left vice versa.
- Suture all ends neatly on the back.
- Cover the green paper with spray glue and press thoroughly to the back of the white paper.
- Fold carefully along the middle with a bone folder.
Easter Postcard (1)
As outside everything is still black, brown and muddy, I wanted to do projects that give a 'springy' feeling by using spring green and other bright colours. I began with some Easter postcards. You can see the first one above. I actually used some blades of grass I found behind my garden.
Easter Postcard With Grass-Blades
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
1 sheet of spring green paper
some dried blades of grass
spray glue
bone folder
- Cut vertical lines 3 mm apart so they build the shape of an egg into the front of your postcard. You can order the template here.
- Cut strips of paper 3, 6 and 8 mm wide.
- Weave the strips into the vertically cut egg-shape, alternating the width and occasionally using the blades of grass, too. You have to handle the grass very carefully, because it's so brittle. I used a small kitchen knife to help threading. The last strips are a bit tricky, too.
- Cut off the excess length of the strips on the back, yet not too short.
- Spray glue onto the green paper and press tightly onto the back of the postcard.
- Carefully fold along the middle with a bone folder.
Donnerstag, 14. Februar 2013
Valentine's Day Love Letters
Happy Valentine!
Here comes a nice little Valentine gift for those of you who like a fiddly job.
Love Letter How to
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
oil pastels in various shades of red, orange, magenta, pink
water colours in similar shades
glue
Here comes a nice little Valentine gift for those of you who like a fiddly job.
Love Letter How to
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
oil pastels in various shades of red, orange, magenta, pink
water colours in similar shades
glue
- Cut out the template (which you can order here). Paint the heart parts with the oil pastels. Add a second layer in water colours covering pink with orange and vice versa. Let dry.
- Cut out all parts, clipping small triangles off the flaps of the heart shapes.
- Fold back all flaps. Do valley and mountain folds in the 'wall'-strips according to the shape of the letters and crease properly.
- Beginning with the letter 'L' spread little glue on all the flaps of the first L and onto the inner rim of the strip. Carefully put together, hiding the endflap of the 'wall'-strip inside. Let dry.
- Repeat the procedure with the second L and insert carefully. You might need to insert the corners and level cover and wall with the help of a knife, which is a bit tricky.
- Repeat the last two steps with the other letters and the heart. As you can imagine the 'E' and the 'V' are especially fiddly. Here you need a bit of patience.
Montag, 11. Februar 2013
Prince Crown
Prince Crown How To:
Material: 1 sheet of white paper
small pieces of cellophane
oil pastels
glue stick
adhesive tape
double-faced adhesive tape
glitter hairspray
- Make a pattern for the crown or feel free to order it here. Cut out carefully.
- Fold the rim in halve and glue together.
- Spray thoroughly with glitter hairspray.
- Glue the ends of the rim together, overlapping.
- For the gems cover small pieces from the cut-off paper with red oil pastel for a ruby and blue for a sapphire. Rumple and smooth again and then paint over the creases in darker shades of red and blue. Cut out circles a bit smaller than in the crown.
- To let the 'gems' be more 3D you can rumple small pieces from the cut-off paper and fix it on the back.
- Rumple small pieces of cellophane and cover the front of the gem, gluing them to the back with tiny pieces of tape.
- Put some double-faced adhesive tape onto the back of the gems and fix them on the crown, alternating the colours.
Abonnieren
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