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| I used vellum on this one. Gorgeous! |
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| Here's one using old book pages. I use a scalloped circle punch for this and love the results. |
Here are a few photos of how I glued the little circles onto another little circle. You can use anywhere from 10 to 16 or 18 circles, depending on how tight you want the flower.
| Fold your 16 circles in half - cut an extra 1" circle and draw 4 quarters on it with a pen. |
| Put glue on your next circle. Always be sure the fold is UP. Then place it inside of the first folded circle, so that the bottom points meet each other. |
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| Add caption |
| These are nice and flat - easy to put on a card that is being mailed. |
| I have some of my paper rosettes for sale in My Etsy shop here. |
Have fun making some of these darling circle pinwheel flowers. The gal in the video glued each one to the end of a decorative straw, to make a pretty little bunch of flowers.
ENJOY!









These are cute and simple to make! Yesterday I was sorting my handmade cards and came across one that used this technique. What was different from your flowers was there were only 5 circles on it, folded in half and spread out like simple petals. Then a matching circle on top. I will try to find it to take a picture.
ReplyDeleteYes they are so easy! And you can use as many or few of petals as you want. I can see they would be cute with only 5 or 6 petals too. With 15 or 16, it's just a tighter flower. Send me a pix via my email! I'm sure this is probably an old technique, but "new" to me! Marilyn
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