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Everyone loves flowers. Wear them in your hair, on your wrist, a jacket or a coat, on a velveteen ribbon around your waist… or sew several to a pillow, fill a bowl, upscale a gift. If you’re planning a wedding, these airy flowers add an etherial, romantic touch. We used them to great effect on our Beaded Floral Wedding Gown Sash.

They can be rather expensive to buy, but are downright cheap to make. And with just a little practice you can turn out a dozen of these beauties in one afternoon.

If you’ve always enjoyed melting things, these flowers give you a legitimate reason to light a candle and melt some fabric. Because, that’s really all you do to make these flowers. Synthetic fabrics will melt when held near a flame. They will also ignite if you put them too close, so before you get started, look for a draft-free spot away from anything flammable where you can focus on what you’re doing (without helpful kiddos or pets).

Fabric and Other Supplies

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  • Synthetic fabrics like nylon organza and polyester satin and lining fabric. They are inexpensive and melt easily. You can use only organza in a single color, or you can mix colors and add in some poly lining fabric as we did in the photo at the top of this page. We liked the way the different fabrics and colors added depth to the flower. In the flower above, we used a turquoise bubble organza, champagne sparkle organza, plus medium and dark turquoise poly lining fabric.
  • A heat source. We used a votive candle because it will burn a long time and it’s short, so you can sit while you work. Some people use a lighter, but we found that more difficult to control. Some people also like to use a jar candle, but again, we like to use the slightly cooler side of the flame on the easy-to-handle votive to melt more heat-sensitive fabrics (like organza).
  • A pattern ( optional, cutting free-form flowers is faster and can look great). We’ve included two templates to download below. If you are cutting a bunch of pieces, cut the outer pieces first so you can keep using the same pattern by cutting it smaller and smaller. You can cut through several layers of fabric at a time.
  • Beads or buttons. For the center of the flower, you can sew in a fancy rhinestone button, or a single pearl bead (as shown above), or a half-dozen seed beads.
  • Aluminum foil. We usually work on a piece of aluminum foil. It’s non-flammable and if there are drips, we’ve not ruined anything.
  • A sewing needle
  • Thread in a coordinated color, or a transparent/invisible monofilament thread
  • Straight pins
  • Scissors
  • Bottle of water (just to be safe)

Getting Started

  1. Find a draft-free location to work. The smallest breeze moves the heat from your candle and changes how it affects the flower. If you can avoid any draft, you can maintain significantly better control.
  2. Before you cut out your final flower petals, cut several free-form circles and practice with them until you get the hang of it.
  3. If you choose to use a template, download and print the Circle Template and/or Flower Template.
  4. Determine how many flowers you want to make, the size and relative fullness. You can use as few or as many layers as you like. Generally at least five or six layers are needed, but you can use many more if you want to make a big full flower. The flower shown above is five inches and has thirteen layers. Begin with a slightly larger size shape than you want for your finished flower because the heat and melting will shrink the fabric.

Making the Flower

  1. Cut your shapes.
  2. Hold one piece at a time over the candle flame. You don’t need to be very close to the flame for the fabric to begin to melt. Slowly rotate the fabric until you have gone all the way around and have achieved the style of edge you like.
    Click to Enlarge
  3. Start with the your largest piece and work down to the smallest.
    Click to Enlarge
  4. Stack your layers from largest to smallest. The flowers actually look prettier if you’re not too perfect in how you arrange them.
    Click to Enlarge
  5. Shift layers from side-to-side until you achieve a natural look.
    Click to Enlarge
  6. Pick up your flower, keeping a finger in the center and at the base so your arrangement doesn’t slip. To secure your layers, insert a straight pin from the back through all the layers as shown below.
    Click to Enlarge
  7. Sew your bead or beads into place.

Hints and Tips

If you want to attach your flower to a barrette, belt or headband, for example, you can sew the flower to a small circle of felt. The felt circle can be a more stable base that is easier to sew to another surface, such as onto the top of a barrette or to headband.

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6 Comments
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Valerie
Valerie
2 months ago

Hi,
This is foremost the BEST Tutorial I have been able to find on making this type of flower! The ones I have found are usually just photographs with a little blurb underneath. You are so informative and thorough! Thank you for sharing this information! The instructions and photographs are PHENOMENAL!
Blessings!!!

Liz Johnson
Admin
Liz Johnson
2 months ago
Reply to  Valerie

Thank you so much, Valerie. We do work very hard on our instructions, so we’re glad you’ve noticed and found a tutorial to love!

Françoise
Françoise
3 years ago

It’s a nice project. May I suggest to have these templates in SVG files? It would be great with the cutting edge.

Liz Johnson
Admin
Liz Johnson
3 years ago
Reply to  Françoise

Hello Francoise – We only post PDFs at this time as they are the most universal. However, you can convert PDF to SVG. There are many tutorials online, including this one: https://www.paperflodesigns.com/blog/easy-way-to-convert-pdf-files-to-svg/

Anna
Anna
3 years ago

Hi I love this pin. I’ve made flowers before and this pin is encouraging me to do more. Thanks so much.

Liz Johnson
Admin
Liz Johnson
3 years ago
Reply to  Anna

Hi Anna – Thank you so much. This pattern is quite flexible, allowing you make flowers in a variety of sizes and “fluffyness” – have fun!

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