Amazing beauty. Imitation of forging. Imitation of artistic forging What is cold forging
Everything ingenious is simple! This decor is another confirmation.
To implement this idea, prepare toilet paper tubes, paper towel tubes, glue, metallic spray paint, pencil, ruler, scissors, frame. The frame can be taken ready-made or made from paper, foam plastic, baking foil tubes, etc. The size of the frame is 25x25 cm.
Straight long strips are cut out of paper towel tubes, which break the ornament into parts. Cut strips along the length of the tube. For curls, strips were cut from toilet paper tubes. Cut the pipe in half and cut strips along the width of the pipe. All strips are cut about one centimeter wide. If you need to get a very twisted element, twist the end of the strip onto a pencil.
The author embodied an ornament for wrought iron that she found on the Internet. It is better to take a simple ornament, consisting of straight lines and curls. It can be drawn on a life-size sheet of paper. Place the frame on this sheet and lay out the ornament according to the template, connecting all the parts with glue or adhesive tape. When the glue dries, paint with metallic paint.
And now in pictures:
And here in white:
You can see how to make such a frame here.
Everything ingenious is simple! This decor is another confirmation. Looking at the patterns on the wall, I decided that it was wrought iron. But it turned out that all the work was made of paper. And such creativity can be done with your own hands.
To implement this idea, prepare toilet paper tubes, paper towel tubes, glue, metallic spray paint, pencil, ruler, scissors, frame. The frame can be taken ready-made or made from paper, polystyrene foam, baking foil tubes, etc. The frame size corresponds to 25x25 cm.
Straight long strips are cut out of paper towel tubes, which break the ornament into parts. Cut strips along the length of the tube. For curls, strips were cut from toilet paper tubes. Cut the pipe in half and cut strips along the width of the pipe. All strips are cut about one centimeter wide. If you need to get a very twisted element, twist the end of the strip onto a pencil.
The author embodied an ornament for wrought iron that she found on the Internet. It is better to take a simple ornament, consisting of straight lines and curls. It can be drawn on a life-size sheet of paper. Place the frame on this sheet and lay out the ornament according to the template, connecting all the parts with glue or adhesive tape. When the glue dries, paint with metallic paint. More detailedMaster Class can be viewed on the blog “Suzy’s Artsy-Craftsy Sitcom”.
You will need:
Large number of toilet paper tubes
Several tubes of paper towel
Glue
Spray paint (metal)
I started cutting 3/8" balsa wood strips into 10" long pieces to shape my squares and then glued them together with tacky glue.Tubes of paper towels were used for straight pieces. I simply cut the length of the tube, crush it and use scrap balsa strips to measure 3/8" strips cut lenthwise from the tube.
The toilet paper tubes were cut into 3/8" strips across the width of the tube to hold the rotor. Simply cut to the length of the tube, line up and mark 3/8" strips across the width. This will result in 3/8" curls.
Using some examples I found online of wrought iron wall art, I created four 10" squares.
I pressed the cardboard with the end of the brush where I wanted the curls and used tacky glue to glue it down as I went.
Using these squares, I started by dividing it into four equal parts and then creating the same pattern in each part. I just created as I went and used the end of the brush to do any curls needed.
False forging for wall decoration
Everything ingenious is simple! This decor is another confirmation. Looking at the patterns on the wall, I decided that it was wrought iron. But it turned out that all the work was made of paper. And such creativity can be done with your own hands.
To implement this idea, prepare toilet paper tubes, paper towel tubes, glue, metallic spray paint, pencil, ruler, scissors, frame. The frame can be taken ready-made or made from paper, polystyrene foam, baking foil tubes, etc. The frame size corresponds to 25x25 cm.
Straight long strips are cut out of paper towel tubes, which break the ornament into parts. Cut strips along the length of the tube. For curls, strips were cut from toilet paper tubes. Cut the pipe in half and cut strips along the width of the pipe. All strips are cut about one centimeter wide. If you need to get a very twisted element, twist the end of the strip onto a pencil.
The author embodied an ornament for wrought iron that she found on the Internet. It is better to take a simple ornament, consisting of straight lines and curls. It can be drawn on a life-size sheet of paper. Place the frame on this sheet and lay out the ornament according to the template, connecting all the parts with glue or adhesive tape. When the glue dries, paint with metallic paint. More detailedMaster Class can be viewed on the blog “Suzy’s Artsy-Craftsy Sitcom”.
You will need:
Large number of toilet paper tubes
Several tubes of paper towel
Glue
Spray paint (metal)
I started cutting 3/8" balsa wood strips into 10" long pieces to shape my squares and then glued them together with tacky glue.Tubes of paper towels were used for straight pieces. I simply cut the length of the tube, crush it and use scrap balsa strips to measure 3/8" strips cut lenthwise from the tube.
The toilet paper tubes were cut into 3/8" strips across the width of the tube to hold the rotor. Simply cut to the length of the tube, line up and mark 3/8" strips across the width. This will result in 3/8" curls.
Using some examples I found online of wrought iron wall art, I created four 10" squares.
I pressed the cardboard with the end of the brush where I wanted the curls and used tacky glue to glue it down as I went.
Using these squares, I started by dividing it into four equal parts and then creating the same pattern in each part. I just created as I went and used the end of the brush to do any curls needed.Once they were completed and dry, I then spray painted them with metallic paint. If you get up close and personal and even touch them, they look completely metal. But not worth nearly the price.
Everything ingenious is simple! This decor is another confirmation. Looking at the patterns on the wall, I decided that it was wrought iron. But it turned out that all the work was made of paper. And such creativity can be done with your own hands.
To implement this idea, prepare toilet paper tubes, paper towel tubes, glue, metallic spray paint, pencil, ruler, scissors, frame. The frame can be taken ready-made or made from paper, polystyrene foam, baking foil tubes, etc. The frame size corresponds to 25x25 cm.
Straight long strips are cut out of paper towel tubes, which break the ornament into parts. Cut strips along the length of the tube. For curls, strips were cut from toilet paper tubes. Cut the pipe in half and cut strips along the width of the pipe. All strips are cut about one centimeter wide. If you need to get a very twisted element, twist the end of the strip onto a pencil.
The author embodied an ornament for wrought iron that she found on the Internet. It is better to take a simple ornament, consisting of straight lines and curls. It can be drawn on a life-size sheet of paper. Place the frame on this sheet and lay out the ornament according to the template, connecting all the parts with glue or adhesive tape. When the glue dries, paint with metallic paint. More detailedMaster Class can be viewed on the blog “Suzy’s Artsy-Craftsy Sitcom”.
You will need:
Large number of toilet paper tubes
Several tubes of paper towel
Glue
Spray paint (metal)
I started cutting 3/8" balsa wood strips into 10" long pieces to shape my squares and then glued them together with tacky glue.Tubes of paper towels were used for straight pieces. I simply cut the length of the tube, crush it and use scrap balsa strips to measure 3/8" strips cut lenthwise from the tube.
The toilet paper tubes were cut into 3/8" strips across the width of the tube to hold the rotor. Simply cut to the length of the tube, line up and mark 3/8" strips across the width. This will result in 3/8" curls.
Using some examples I found online of wrought iron wall art, I created four 10" squares.
I pressed the cardboard with the end of the brush where I wanted the curls and used tacky glue to glue it down as I went.
Using these squares, I started by dividing it into four equal parts and then creating the same pattern in each part. I just created as I went and used the end of the brush to do any curls needed.
In our family, everyone now knows the word Paper art (http://stranamasterov.ru/user/151613). Because the whole house is a decorating workshop. Today I am again with the box. And again from a mobile phone (this little box is probably three years old already). Her turn has come. It turns out that being Plyushkin is not so bad. Where else would I find objects to use my talents?
The medallion is cast from plaster. I have a chain strap made of metal medallions, hollow inside - it’s very convenient to make castings...
I made the side panels the same this time.
And this is the work of my daughter Alevtina. Let me explain: the dots on the glass are millet. On my box I have stripes made of corrugated cardboard, balls and leaf flowers - cold porcelain, and all the curls are napkins, simply twisted into a flagellum. Flagella were twisted from one layer of napkin. Twisted on fabric. The thickness of the flagellum is slightly more than 1 mm. Oh yes, I forgot about the pasta... The stars on the lid are Italian-made pasta. And the metal effect is created thanks to gold tinting. They painted it with black acrylic, and on top there was bronze acrylic (glass) and gold acrylic (box).