Pinwheel Tutorial: Materials

Pinwheel Tutorial: Materials

I made these sweet pinwheels for favors and decor for Laelia’s birthday party, and although I know there are plenty of pinwheel tutorials out there in blogland, I thought I would make my contribution seeing as these are a bit more elaborate than I have seen elsewhere. Since the materials list is long, (and I need a bit more time to prepare the step-by-step guide–Laelia is napping less and needing mommy more!), I’m releasing the materials list first, and hopefully I’ll have the tutorial ready to go tomorrow! Stay tuned!
1) Paper! A lightweight cardstock works best, too thin and it doesn’t have enough substance, and too thick it’s too hard to fold, although any paper will definitely work. We even used some spray mount and glued some wrapping papers together to make some pretty double sided sheets (wrapping paper is great for many things, it’s so cheap compared to the expensive sheets used for scrapbooking!). We did 6″ x 6″ for the large wheels, and 4.5″ x 4.5″ for the smaller wheels.

2) Scissors – For cutting slits in the paper. Alternately, you can use a paper cutter. I used both, depending on what was closest, they both have their advantages and disadvantages. A paper cutter will assure you a straight measured line, but there is something satisfying about picking up and just eyeballing a 45° angle…

3) Wire Cutters – The sort you’d use for jewelry making will work just fine. These are to cut the backs off the pins once we have them through the skewers.

4) Ribbon – To wrap around the skewers. Make. Pretty.

5)  Eyelet Setter – To help set the eyelet in the center of the pinwheel. I have this set from JoAnns.

6) Beads – I  used some glass beads I have had for about 15 years! Any beads larger than a seed bead has potential to work here.

7) Eyelets – These came as a set with the eyelet setter I bought. Use these at the center of the pinwheel.

8) Pins – A pin with a decorative head will work best, or you can glue a button or a cabochon will work as well. Just make sure that the pin head is large enough to hold on a bead. I bought these pins to hold the ribbon on the bouquets for my wedding. :)

9) Large Wooden Painted Beads – These go on the ends of the skewer to finish it off nicely. I bought a big pack of wood beads like these from JoAnns.

10) Hole Punch – You’ll use this to punch holes, of course! Use a small hole punch.

11) More Paper! – These are 1.5″ x 1.5″ pieces of paper that get prettied up and are used in the center of the pinwheel.

12) Fancy  Edge Cutter – To pretty up that piece of paper I was just typing about. :)

13) Bamboo Skewers – Use as the base of the pinwheel.

14) Glue Gun – We can always use a glue gun!

Now that you have all of your material’s gathered, head on over to the pinwheel tutorial!

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Welcome

Welcome to Visual Vocabularie! My name is Jesyka, and I am a designer, artist, mom to Laelia and Luca, wife to software engineer and UX designer Tyler, coffee lover, and all around enthused person. This is my blog; here I share my personal projects, whether it's a furniture makeover, a new painting, a birthday party, an invitation I designed, or a favorite outfit for my little. You’ll also catch a glimpse into our family life in Los Angeles.

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