Weird Arts And Crafts
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- algonacchick
- Thanks, Patti!
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I found a gumpaste mold, but you have to make the head and torso, legs, and arms all seperate. That'd be kinda difficult. I'll keep looking. Hey, I found an accordion mold, why not a people mold?
4 words that Al said to me that blew me away:
"How's Problem Child doing?" - 7/12/11
So awesome!
Al Team #325
"How's Problem Child doing?" - 7/12/11
So awesome!
Al Team #325
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- algonacchick
- Thanks, Patti!
- Posts: 53948
- Joined: Sat Nov 03, 2001 2:00 am
- Location: ALgonac, MI
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I want to do that, but match the cookies with the instruments. I just really prefer doing the cookies, and decorating them with the chocolate. Multi-colored chocolate people would be very labor-intensive.
4 words that Al said to me that blew me away:
"How's Problem Child doing?" - 7/12/11
So awesome!
Al Team #325
"How's Problem Child doing?" - 7/12/11
So awesome!
Al Team #325
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- Obsessed
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Based off my accordion-grams [foldable paper accordion toy/card combo], I made a really small set of bellows and used some craft foam to make the smallest accordion trinket I could. It's by my speakers in this pic, with a quarter for size comparison. Sorry the pic's such low quality; I'm using my super-cheap camera T_T

*Yup, the bellows can squash and stretch. The photo doesn't do justice for the bellows.. Anyway...
I'll try to do a tutorial sooner or later [for the accordion-grams at least. Dave knows what they look like; I sent him one of the prototypes XD]

*Yup, the bellows can squash and stretch. The photo doesn't do justice for the bellows.. Anyway...
I'll try to do a tutorial sooner or later [for the accordion-grams at least. Dave knows what they look like; I sent him one of the prototypes XD]
Anata mo watashi mo Polka!
- weirdalfan95
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Thanks 
The bellows are the hardest part, and after a little practice, it's easy. All you do is pleat paper like you would with a paper fan [though you gotta make sure that the pleats are even]. I'll try to explain without pictures [I'll make a visual tutorial when I can]; Take a piece of lined paper [notebook'll do], and cut 4 pieces. Two wide rectangles, and two more with the same length, and a shorter width. The shorter pieces need small cuts in the sides on every other line. Then pleat the paper using the lines as guides. You'll start to get a "feel" for how the pleats fit. Once you know it's right, glue each pleat carefully to get open bellows ---> l_l
Carefully tuck the pleats from the last piece of paper [with a bit of glue, of course]. Then, press the bellows together, and pull them [make sure none of the folds stick]. By this time, the bellows should look right. If any paper sticks out, you can clip it. If none of what I just said makes sense, sorry; I'm horrible at explaining this kind of stuff. I'm better at visual instruction.

The bellows are the hardest part, and after a little practice, it's easy. All you do is pleat paper like you would with a paper fan [though you gotta make sure that the pleats are even]. I'll try to explain without pictures [I'll make a visual tutorial when I can]; Take a piece of lined paper [notebook'll do], and cut 4 pieces. Two wide rectangles, and two more with the same length, and a shorter width. The shorter pieces need small cuts in the sides on every other line. Then pleat the paper using the lines as guides. You'll start to get a "feel" for how the pleats fit. Once you know it's right, glue each pleat carefully to get open bellows ---> l_l
Carefully tuck the pleats from the last piece of paper [with a bit of glue, of course]. Then, press the bellows together, and pull them [make sure none of the folds stick]. By this time, the bellows should look right. If any paper sticks out, you can clip it. If none of what I just said makes sense, sorry; I'm horrible at explaining this kind of stuff. I'm better at visual instruction.
Anata mo watashi mo Polka!
- weirdalfan95
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- weirdalfan95
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- algonacchick
- Thanks, Patti!
- Posts: 53948
- Joined: Sat Nov 03, 2001 2:00 am
- Location: ALgonac, MI
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