Paper Piecing Tutorial

Queenie

Mouseketeer
Joined
Jan 4, 2005
Messages
3,144
Welcome to my tutorial on paper piecing. I hope you all enjoy it and find it easy to use.


Step 1
Locate a good image. A good image needs to:

- Be big enough to print clearly
- Have clean, sharp and well defined lines.
- Not be grainy.

You can search online or scan a child’s colouring book. Take time to edit the grainy “grit” out of images, particularly if they are scanned. It will make the final product cleaner and better looking. If it is a simple design (or if you are good at drawing), you could even draw the picture yourself.

Here is the picture I will be using – http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v497/HeathenAngel/2peas/Poohbear.jpg



Step 2
Count the colours you will need and gather the appropriate cardstock from your stash. Remember that you can also use patterned paper, vellum and transparancies so think about what would work best. Obviously the closer the colour of your card to the original colour of the character, the more accurate it will look. To make Pooh Bear we need:

- Orange for his body
- Red for his shirt and inside his mouth.
- Pink for his tongue.

You may need to cut out the same pieces twice in the same colour if you want to make your image 3D. More on that later. If you have any really tiny pieces in your picture, considering colouring them in with a felt pen rather than printing them. I will be doing this with the inside of Pooh’s mouth and his tongue.

Also think about what colour you want the base to be, for Pooh it makes most sense to be orange as there is more of that colour than any other. For any human piecing, skin colour is likely to be best. If parts of your image are transparent (e.g. a ghost or an astronaut’s helmet), consider vellum or office transparencies - for these remember to reverse your image if needed.



Step 3
Using your computer, resize the image to the size you want to print it at. I want Pooh to be about 4 inches tall so I will need to make him smaller as he is currently almost 12. Remember to take the white space around the image into consideration when altering the size on the computer and also bear in mind that the smaller you make your paper piecing, the fiddlier it will be to cut out.

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Step 4
Print the picture out onto every colour you need. DO NOT RESIZE INBETWEEN PRINTS. You need each colour to be at exactly the same scale for it to work.

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Step 5
Cut out the base colour (in my case the orange.) For this colour only you are cutting out the entire shape. Take your time. When you are done, use a black pen to go around the edges of the shape to give a defined edge and get rid of any white or coloured core that is showing.

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Step 6
Cut out the other colours. Remember that you only need to cut out the appropriate piece/s in these colours. In my example I only need to cut out Pooh’s shirt. When you’re done, remember to edge you pieces with the black pen.

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Step 7
Attach the pieces onto the base. If you want to add dimension, use foam dots, if you want the piece to be flat, as in my example, a glue stick has always been my best option. Be very careful when lining up the pieces using the original lines on the base. Remember to give delicate, thin parts extra support if they are being raised up on foam.

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Pooh needs some extra dimension so I will print him again onto the orange card. This time I only need to cut out the parts I want, not the whole shape. When you’ve done, edge the new pieces with the black pen and stick them down with foam dots.

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Step 8
Colour in any small, fiddly parts and use chalks to add shading if you want.

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Step 9
The final stage, if you want, now is the time to add embellishments. This is entirely in your court and depends on what you have made. For a snowman you could use wool to make a scarf or a carrot brad for a nose. For Santa, some white fluffy fabric could be used to add texture to his suit. It is entirely up to you so get creative and think what you have that could be used to add something extra to your creation.
 
Wow, Queenie! That is awesome- thanks for the instructions!
 
Not to ask an asinine questions, but why bother? He looks awesome :love: , no doubt about it, but in the case of Pooh, why not just use the cricut and save yourself a few steps? Now granted if you have a child obsessed with Sponge bob or something, you are going to have to do it the manual way until cricut comes out with a nick cart.

Is there something I am missing. Does doing it this way make it look better? if so, I am going to have to try it this weekend.
 

Wonderful!!! I wish I could shade as well as you, you really make pooh seem alive

As a tip, I tend to edit my image and cut out the piece I want in a certain on the computer first so I don't print an entire image. Another words, for pooh, I'd take the image and cut out the shirt and then print it. That wastes less ink and paper for me. Just as a thought and a tip.
 
Hi guys,

No asisnine questions here. As you say, some characters are virtually impossible to find as store bought, plus living in the UK everything costs way more here so it can be a cheap way of using scraps and saving money. Personally, I cannot afford a Cricut or other cutting machine but this way I can still create the same look on my pages, effectively for free as I just use scraps and download pictures from the net to use (or scan my neice and nephew's colouring books.) Paper piecings do have a certain look to them and whether you want to use them depends upon the style of page you want to make. I have loads of pre made embellihsments and sometimes they will look far better. Sometimes however i just want that unique, hand made touch.

Jen - I agree with you about only printing the bits you need and most of the time I do that. However I did this to be a very basic tutorial about how to create the piecing and I wasn't sure how adept everyone is at using photo editing software. If I started referring to digitally cropping the different layers so you only printed the bits you need, it may put a lot of people off. I decided to leave it as simple as possible.
 
Not to ask an asinine questions, but why bother? He looks awesome :love: , no doubt about it, but in the case of Pooh, why not just use the cricut and save yourself a few steps? Now granted if you have a child obsessed with Sponge bob or something, you are going to have to do it the manual way until cricut comes out with a nick cart.

Is there something I am missing. Does doing it this way make it look better? if so, I am going to have to try it this weekend.

The pooh cart for the cricut hasn't been released yet, so for now this is the only choice we have. Plus, for me atleast, I can't afford the cricut, so paper piecing by hand is my only choice
 
Jen - I agree with you about only printing the bits you need and most of the time I do that. However I did this to be a very basic tutorial about how to create the piecing and I wasn't sure how adept everyone is at using photo editing software. If I started referring to digitally cropping the different layers so you only printed the bits you need, it may put a lot of people off. I decided to leave it as simple as possible.

Yes, that makes total sense:rotfl:. I just wanted to add that because of how many people are on the ban. I love how informative and simple it was:dance3:
 
perfect lesson! I love the fact that you included pictures -
great job!
I might have to try this
Thanks
Jennifer
 
Great lesson Queenie.. thank you for the step by step.. you know me being a blonde we have to be direct!!!!

Now, hop on that plane and come over here and watch my kids so I can try this!!! :)
 
great job Queenie. I never thought about doing the shading on his feet, it really add more dimension. I learned this technic (using coloring pages) from Queenie when she did an Elephant for me. I don't have the editing software so bare bones technics are good for me.
I followed your steps last week to do a Little Green Man from Toy Story! And he turned out awesome!
 
Queenie--thanks for the step by step I never knew how paper piecing was done. I can't wait to try it!
 
Thanks so much! I just started paper piecing and this tutorial gave me tips I hadn't thought of!
 
thanks so much queenie! i love him! great job on the step by step. i need that. it makes it so much easier!
thanks again!
 
great job Queenie. I never thought about doing the shading on his feet, it really add more dimension. I learned this technic (using coloring pages) from Queenie when she did an Elephant for me. I don't have the editing software so bare bones technics are good for me.
I followed your steps last week to do a Little Green Man from Toy Story! And he turned out awesome!

i don't have the editing software either. is it a special program???

lets see that little green army guy----pllllleeeeasssee!
 
I think BAMB did the the Little Green Men as in Aliens from Toy Story.
 
I understand how to do the basic version and think this is a GREAT tutorial. Would you be willing to do a tut. for someone on how to divide out the layers electronically? I have a Stitch I would like to mass produce and I hate to waste the paper to print the whole thing every time.
 
The way to do it depends entirely on what software you're using. I use Paint Shop Pro 8. Basically you need to use your crop tool to only show the part of the image you need, then print it, undo and start again. it's hard to explain without knowing the ins and outs of whatever you're using.
 














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