Headband with daisies and rose hips
Modeling from cold porcelain is a pleasant and interesting activity for everyone who loves to create beauty with their own hands. The material is very plastic, does not require firing, and the products dry in air. Cold porcelain is perfectly painted with oil paints, food coloring, and other pigments. Below is a master class on sculpting chamomile flowers and rose hips, as well as assembling them onto a headband. With your own hands you can create a fashionable and, most importantly, unique accessory.
For work you will need the following materials and tools: cold porcelain of white, red, yellow, green, beige, PVA glue, furniture glue or epoxy, stack, stack with ball, chamomile plunger, chamomile center mold, leaf mold, floral wire, scissors, sponge, headband, nippers.
A piece of red porcelain is measured and rolled into an oval, approximately the size of a natural rose hip.
Apply PVA glue to the floral wire and place an oval on it.
A small “cake” is created from beige porcelain. It needs to be stuck on the tip of the stack, then stuck to the red oval, onto which PVA glue is previously applied.
Using a stack, a layer of white porcelain is rolled out, about 2 mm thick. The flower is cut with a plunger. Next, the stack should be used to shape the petals, making them wider and thinner. Then, cuts are made on the petals using nail scissors. To make chamomile look more natural, you should let the flower dry before cutting.
The center of a chamomile is formed from a yellow ball using a mold. If mold is not available, you can use a toothpick to make many small indentations on the ball.
The finished center is also placed on floral wire.
Each daisy will consist of two flowers, one overlapping the other, making sure that the petals of the top flower overlap the voids of the bottom. PVA glue is applied between them. Using a stack with a ball, make a small depression in the middle of the flower. This will give realism and volume to the flower.
The dried core is threaded into the middle of the flower. First, PVA glue should be applied to its base.
This is such a cute daisy.
Next the leaves are molded. A ball is rolled out of green porcelain, a droplet is formed from it, it should be placed on the mold and formed into a leaf shape with your fingers. The rim required about 20 leaves. In this case, they have more of a connecting function than a decorative one. For one headband you will need 10-11 medium-sized daisies and 24 rose hips.
The wire is cut from the chamomile flowers. In this case, the wire is used only for the convenience of creating a flower.
The rim is degreased with alcohol and furniture glue or epoxy is applied to it.
The leaves are glued while still a little wet. Each leaf covers 1-2 berries. Chamomiles are glued to the leaves with PVA glue.
The order may be different, it all depends on the desire and idea.
The headband should be left to dry for a day, after which you can wear it with pleasure or proudly give it to a loved one.
For work you will need the following materials and tools: cold porcelain of white, red, yellow, green, beige, PVA glue, furniture glue or epoxy, stack, stack with ball, chamomile plunger, chamomile center mold, leaf mold, floral wire, scissors, sponge, headband, nippers.
A piece of red porcelain is measured and rolled into an oval, approximately the size of a natural rose hip.
Apply PVA glue to the floral wire and place an oval on it.
A small “cake” is created from beige porcelain. It needs to be stuck on the tip of the stack, then stuck to the red oval, onto which PVA glue is previously applied.
Using a stack, a layer of white porcelain is rolled out, about 2 mm thick. The flower is cut with a plunger. Next, the stack should be used to shape the petals, making them wider and thinner. Then, cuts are made on the petals using nail scissors. To make chamomile look more natural, you should let the flower dry before cutting.
The center of a chamomile is formed from a yellow ball using a mold. If mold is not available, you can use a toothpick to make many small indentations on the ball.
The finished center is also placed on floral wire.
Each daisy will consist of two flowers, one overlapping the other, making sure that the petals of the top flower overlap the voids of the bottom. PVA glue is applied between them. Using a stack with a ball, make a small depression in the middle of the flower. This will give realism and volume to the flower.
The dried core is threaded into the middle of the flower. First, PVA glue should be applied to its base.
This is such a cute daisy.
Next the leaves are molded. A ball is rolled out of green porcelain, a droplet is formed from it, it should be placed on the mold and formed into a leaf shape with your fingers. The rim required about 20 leaves. In this case, they have more of a connecting function than a decorative one. For one headband you will need 10-11 medium-sized daisies and 24 rose hips.
The wire is cut from the chamomile flowers. In this case, the wire is used only for the convenience of creating a flower.
The rim is degreased with alcohol and furniture glue or epoxy is applied to it.
The leaves are glued while still a little wet. Each leaf covers 1-2 berries. Chamomiles are glued to the leaves with PVA glue.
The order may be different, it all depends on the desire and idea.
The headband should be left to dry for a day, after which you can wear it with pleasure or proudly give it to a loved one.
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