ב"ה

Moon Phase

CURRENT MOON

TorahWomen.com News. Sign Up!






NO SPAM
Advertisement
Pinwheels PDF Print E-mail

PinwheelsThese were so fun as a kid! Here's how to make some for your children or grandchildren.







Pinwheels

Colorful pinwheels, made out of coordinating sheets of origami or lightweight paper, stand tall against a blue summer sky, poised to whirl at the slightest suggestion of wind.

Cut a thin dowel or skewer to desired length (clip pointed end from skewer); paint and let dry. Choose two coordinating sheets of origami or lightweight paper. Cut a square from each the size you'd like your pinwheel to be (ours range from 3 to 6 inches). Use spray mount to glue squares together. Fold in half, diagonally, and in half again, then unfold. Cut along each crease two-thirds of way to square's center, dividing each corner into two points. Bring every other point to center so points overlap. Hold in place, poke a pushpin through center, and, keeping points in place, remove pushpin. Insert a map pin into hole formed (the pushpin hole is slightly larger than circumference of the map pin, enabling the pinwheel to spin). Thread a small bead onto pin behind the wheel, and poke pin into dowel 1/2 inch from top. To prevent wood from splitting, soak the dowel tip in water before inserting map pin.


 

MarthaStewart.com

 

No one has commented on this article.
Please keep your comments brief and on topic.
Name :
Title :
       
Comment(s) :
Verify :
What is the shape of a ball ?
 
< Prev   Next >
Public Ads Not Individually Reviewed By TW

Jewish Banners
rimage6.jpg
Torah Women's Music