Showing posts with label roses ya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roses ya. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2008

Coffee Filter Roses



This is an incredibly easy, cheap, and satisfying teen craft! Perfect for Valentine's Day.
I first saw this on craftster too, and then found a woman who appeared on the Martha Stewart Show demonstrating her technique for making the coffee filter roses. The craftster version is a little rough and ready, the Mommy Makes Roses version is a little obsessive, so I kind of combined both versions.
Link to original Craftster tutorial
Link to Mommy Makes Roses website and her Martha Stewart tutorial

Instead of using the round basket style filters, I used the cone shaped ones, and instead of painting them individually, I dipped them in watered down paint and dried them before cutting out the petal shapes. One other thing I did that worked well for me was I just wired on some leaves from silk flowers- I had used the flowers for a wreath a while ago but knew I'd have a use for the leaves at some point so kept them around- being a pack rat can have it's (admittedly small) rewards! But the leaves look nice and give the roses a little stability. Be warned- more adults are asking about the roses than teens- some I made in black and red were liked more by the goth girls. The library is even selling them as part of the Valentine's Booksale, and I used one to dress up a book display!






Difficulty: 3 out of 5. It's an easy project, but takes one or two tries to get the knack of it- clumsy teens might get frustrated (but will still be able to make something kind of reasonable looking).

Cost: 1 out of 5. Cheap cheap cheap. I am assuming that you have paint and scissors? Is that expecting too much?

Supplies
$2.00
Cone shaped coffee filters (or basket style if you need to go even cheaper.)

$1.00
wooden barbecue skewers

$1.50
paddle of 24 guage floral wire

$1.50
floral tape

Hints or tips- well, the tutorial is really good, but I think making it right on the skewer is easier and more efficient than the corsage-pin thing KaylaWTE does. If you felt like being finicky, gluing a bead to the end of the skewer would be a nice touch.

Alternative easier instructions for younger kids or teens without crafty skill!