Showing posts with label DIY Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY Flowers. Show all posts

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Making Flowers

I'm hoping to get a lot of wedding project work done this week, while the FI is out of town.  One of my main goals is making some clay flowers.  I have been practiced here and there, but haven't made much progress towards my inspiration bouquet.

But, I think I'm finally getting the hang of it, and finally made one rose that I'm going to let dry.  It isn't perfect, but I've realized that perfect may be a bit beyond my skill level at this point.  Plus, I've realized that it might be unnecessary to have perfection when its very hard to find a "perfect" real flower.

So, without further ado, here are a couple pictures of my first finished rose:



I'm hoping to make a bunch of the roses, plus some other flower varieties for my bouquet, the corsages and bouts.  Once I'm feeling a bit more confident in my skills, I'll write up my tips for making these flowers out of clay.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

DIY - Sequin & Bead Flower

Last weekend, I worked to re-create a version of the bead and sequin flower I had fallen in love with, which turned out to be from a Laura Lee Designs handbag.  I spent a lot of time staring at the flower, working to "reverse engineer" it, without a physical version.  It was time consuming and difficult.  But, the end results were worth it:

This and all following pics were taken on my brand new Canon Rebel XS (thank you, woot).

It was tricky even starting this project without a DIY tutorial...  How dependent we've all become on the internet.  It's good because I usually feel like I can tackle any project, given a wireless signal and the right tools.  It's bad because I realized how hesitant I've become to try making something without explicit instructions.  And, this is definitely a habit learned later in life, I can't imagine what it's like to be younger and not remember what it's like not to have so much information a search string and click away.  But, I digress.

Here's how I made the flower:

I made a trip to Jo-Ann Fabric and looked for the items I thought I'd need to make the flowers.  I bought several colors of sequins in two sizes: 5mm and 8mm.  I also got some glass beads in a couple sizes and invisible and silver threads.  Finally, I picked out a couple loose sheets of green felt.

When I got home, I organized everything in a tackle box my mom bought me a few years ago for Christmas...  She said I'd find it useful for keeping small things in order.  She was right.

Ooooh, sparkly!

I didn't take pictures while making the first flower.  So, this morning, I decided to make another and take pictures of the steps involved.  I swear it had nothing to do with creating an excuse to use my new camera.

First, I cut out a piece of felt about three inches square.  The original flower had been made on a too small piece, so I erred on the too big side this time.


Then, I thread my needle with the invisible string and started to sew on the middle "stamen" beads.


I had decided to use two of the larger round beads, instead of the long beads I used in the original flower because the long beads were a bit too large for the small sequins.  I came up from the bottom side of the felt with my needle and thread on two of the beads.  I then went back through the bead closest to the felt on my way back through the felt.  This forced the top bead to turn sideways and locked the two in place.  I did this three times, all close to each other and ended up with this:


Next, I picked out my bead pattern.  I used two small, round beads, a small sequin, a large sequin, another bead and another set of sequins.  Finally, I added one last bead to the end because I realized in the first flower that it was difficult to get the second row of flowers where I wanted them when the first row's sequins were flush to the felt.  I pulled the needle up, close to the center beads, and thread the "petal".


The next part is probably the most difficult.  I let the beads slide down to the felt and held the thread taught, in the direction I wanted the petal to go.  I made sure the the sequins were laying the way I wanted and held them in place with my pointer finger on my left hand.  With my right hand, I put the needle back through the felt under the last bead, where I thought the middle should go once the thread was pulled tight. 

I slowly worked my way around the middle, adding the same number of beads and sequins to each petal and placing them in a way that looked good to me.  It is a subjective kind of thing.  I ended up with eight petals (the first flower had ten).


Next, I started adding the second row of petals.  I used the same pattern of beads and sequins as the first row, without the last bead.  I placed two petals between each of the ones on the first row, leaving me with sixteen outside petals.

Here's the end product:


That's it.  It probably took me about two hours total to complete this flower, but I feel like I could get through them a bit faster now that I know the process a bit more (and if I wasn't stopping to take pictures).

Not sure if I'll use these anywhere in wedding or, even if I did, how I would use them.  They'd probably need to be sewn to something, not sure how they'd hold up on a "stem" of floral wire.  Maybe a wrist corsage made with different sized flowers, tied with a ribbon?  Or, attached to a hair pin?  We'll see.

Either way, I'm glad I tried to make something without actual instructions available.  It was a great challenge and a lot of fun once I got some of it figured out.

Did you try to make something you saw and fell in love with without having any instruction?  Do you find yourself making things that you're not sure if/how you'll use?

Friday, January 13, 2012

Flower Inspiration

Since it's snowing and blustery outside (to the point where the FI's car door was frozen shut this morning... grrr), I think I may finally be ready to hunker down and work on some flower experiments this weekend.

I've already started trying to copy some of my favorites but don't feel any closer to deciding on what should 1. decorate the tables or 2. be included in my bouquet and the corsages/bouts.

So far, I've made kusudama flowers:

My First Kusudama Flower :  wedding kusudama rhinestone origami orange bouquet flowers diy Kusudama
My first attempt w/ origami flowers, based on the instructions at Folding Trees

They are relatively easy but super time consuming.  I think I timed myself at about a minute per petal, and that's just the folding, not the gluing together portion (or the cutting of paper into the right sized square when you've bought something way too large).  Factor in the five to six petals per flower and we're talking about a LOT of time.

I had fallen in love with these after seeing some fun and colorful examples of bouquets on etsy.  But after making a few and realizing that the overall feel of our wedding was changing, I don't think these will be featured.  The only exception is that I might try to include them in a corsage for my mom because she ooooh-ed and aaaah-ed over them dramatically when she first saw them.  (Not sure if that was a mom being a mom or if she was really that impressed.)

Next, I moved onto coffee filter peonies.  My inspiration and instruction came from this:


I love how simple these are.  Beautiful, classic and surprisingly realistic.  They are definitely still in the running and I've been testing out colored versions (dyed with food coloring).  I'm still not 100% sure because they involve a lot of floral tape, something I HATE using, but we'll see.

Finally, I ran across this picture recently:


See that beauty in the lower right corner?  I decided that I absolutely had to figure out how to make it.  Then, after a lot of searching around, I realized that I was going to be on my own.  I couldn't find any tutorials or anything even close out there...  But, it looks simple enough, right?  Ha, ha.

I did make an attempt last weekend, after an excruciating trip to Jo-Ann Fabric (seriously, it took me FOREVER to find the sequins...  maybe because I've never, ever bought a sequin before?).

Next up, my learnings about DIY-ing without internet support and a tutorial on how to make (a reasonable facsimile of) the beaded sequin flower above.