Os voy a mostrar cómo hacer una washi ningyo muy fácil y resultona. Las washi ningyo son las muñecas de papel japonesas, washi=papel, ningyo=muñeca. Necesitaremos cartulina negra, cartulina blanca y papeles estampados finos o de color liso, según queramos la combinación de colores. Cortaremos las siguientes piezas: - Cartulina blanca: un círculo de 3 cm de diámetro que será la cabeza, un trozo de 1´5x4 cm que será el cuello y otro de 3´5x6, el cuerpo. - Papel estampado fino tipo folio o de origami: un trozo de 15x15 cm para el kimono, otro de 11x11 cm la falda, 2 de 3´5x3´5 serán el cuello y el obi. Una tira de 1´5x23 cm para el dobladillo. Doblamos la pieza de 15x15 (el kimono) de forma transversal, la tira de 1´5x23 la doblamos justo a la mitad y a lo largo. Pegamos las 3 piezas que componen el cuerpo y hacemos un par de cortes en los hombros. El kimono queda como un triángulo, lo pegamos dentro de la tira. Al cuerpo le pegamos uno de los trozos de 3´5x3´5. Pegamos el cuerpo justo en el centro y doblamos el kimono como indico en la foto. Ya va tomando forma. Un segundo doble hará los brazos. Cortamos la punta que sobra del dobladillo en paralelo al papel del kimono. En principio había pensado poner el obi de color fucsia, pero creo que le queda mejor con el papel de topos. Pegamos el obi entre los dos brazos y encima, pegamos los bracitos. Así, ya podríamos tener hecha la muñeca, es otra versión, pero le vamos a añadir la falda. La falda la hacemos con el trozo de papel de 11x11, como el mío no es a doble cara, he usado 2 papeles. Lo doblamos como un tríptico, no hace falta que los 3 lados sean iguales. La pegamos dentro de la muñeca. Podemos jugar haciendo dobladillos a la falda para darle movimiento. Las medidas de la muñeca las puedes variar para hacerla más grande o más pequeña. Con la cabeza pequeña y la falda larga, será alta y estilizada; con la falda más corta y la cabeza grande, tendrá un aspecto infantil. Ahora ya, sesión de peluquería y maquillaje según tu imaginación. Se suelen dejar con la cara en blanco, pero a mí me gusta pintarles el rubor y la carita. El peinado lo he hecho con 3 círculos diferentes de cartulina negra. Decoramos a gusto, podemos hacerle un tocado, joyas, cinturón, ... Entre las manos le puedes poner flores, una cesta, un abanico, una jaula, ... Perfecta para un marcapáginas original. También se puede incluir en una tarjeta, layout, portada de álbum, ... Os dejo más washi ningyo que he hecho en otras ocasiones para que veáis diferentes peinados y caritas. Estas las hice para un intercambio y las siguientes para la campaña de Marcapáginas para San Jorge que hace la Asociación de Scrapbooking de Aragón Mañoscrapper@s. Espero que os haya gustado y que os inspire para hacer muchas washi ningyos, que son superbonitas. Ana Laiglesia - Ana Laiglesia Fotografía
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Os voy a mostrar cómo hacer una washi ningyo muy fácil y resultona. Las washi ningyo son las muñecas de papel japonesas, washi=papel, ning...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collection of kimono dolls to decorate a scrapbook page, make a pretty greeting card, or attach to a gift package. Have fun! A couple of things before we begin: I used "washi" (Japanese paper made of fiber so it has more of a cloth-like texture) for the boy doll. I used a paper pattern I got from Creative Park for the girl doll. I simply printed the pattern on plain old printer paper and cut it to size. It worked great, but if you have access to washi, I would certainly reccommend using it. An important Japanese cultural note: Please fold the Kimono layers as shown (left side first, then right side). Right side first is funeral attire. Kneeling Origami Kimono DollAssemble your materials: You will need: black crepe paper for hair - 1 piece cm x 2.5 cm and 1 piece 4 cm x 3.5 cm white cardstock for head - a circle about 2.5 cm across (the size of a quarter) white cardstock for neck - a rectangle about 1/2 cm x 5 cm paper for collar - three 5 cm x 5 cm squares paper for kimono - one 10 cm x 10 cm square paper for underskirt - one 5cm x 5 cm square Glue ' Step One: Assemble the neck and collar: 1. Fold the three squares in half, into a triangle. Put a tiny bit of glue down the center of two triangles. 2. Layer the triangles as shown above. 3. Flip the layered triangle stack over and glue neck to the center. 4. Begin folding the top left flap across the neck at the angle shown. Repeat with the right side. 5. Repeat until all layers have been folded. You may use a tiny drop of glue to secure your collar layers, if you prefer. ' Step Two: Make the Kimono 1. Fold your 10 x 10 square in half, making a triangle. Fold the top left corner in to meet the center of the right side of the triangle. 2. Repeat with top right corner. 3. Unfold your triangle and position your neck/collar piece. Refold your kimono and adjust the collar as necessary. Secure neck using a tiny drop of glue. 4. Fold bottom flaps up and crease. Unfold and tuck into the "pocket" made by the top kimono layer. ' Step Three: Assemble the underskirt: 1. Fold 5cm x 5cm square into a triangle. Unfold back to square and fold top corner down to center. Unfold to square. Fold bottom corner up to the crease you just made, and fold corners in, as shown above. 2. Fold both bottom corners in and secure with tiny drops of glue. 3. Slide underskirt into kimono pocket, leaving about 1cm showing at the bottom of the kimono. ' Step Four: Create your hairstyle 1. Place cardboard circle on top of 4cm x 3.5cm square, as shown. 2. Wrap hair around circle and secure with tiny drops of glue at the "temples". 3. Flip hair back as shown in picture above. 4. Glue on bangs (the smaller of the crepe paper rectangles. 5. Fold bangs over back of head and glue into place. Final Step: Position head on neck, trimming neck if necessary. Glue into place... You've now created your first Origami Kimono Doll! You can use your creativity in making different hairstyles for your dolls, using shorter hair for boys, adding hair ornaments or bows, or even embellishing your dolls with glitter or ribbon. I kept my doll "as is" and attached her to a plain brown greeting card with one tiny dragonfly floating above her. I think the simplicity of this is beautiful. ' Please come back next week for the next version of my origami kimono dolls. Until then... ' Hugs and blessings~ ~~~Anne
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Manualidad con fotografías y explicación paso a paso para hacer una bonita muñeca japonesa con kimono de papel.
Esta muñeca es bastante sencilla de hacer y queda muy bonita. MATERIALES: Cabeza y cuello: 1. Papel blanco grueso (tipo cartulina): cí...
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Manualidad con fotografías y explicación paso a paso para hacer una bonita muñeca japonesa con kimono de papel.
Muñecas japonesas de papel japonés - 手作り和紙人形 - JAPANESE PAPER DOLLS - WASHI NINGYO tutorial diy paso a paso chiyogami yuzen
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collection of kimono dolls to decorate a scrapbook page, make a pretty greeting card, or attach to a gift package. Have fun! A couple of things before we begin: I used "washi" (Japanese paper made of fiber so it has more of a cloth-like texture) for the boy doll. I used a paper pattern I got from Creative Park for the girl doll. I simply printed the pattern on plain old printer paper and cut it to size. It worked great, but if you have access to washi, I would certainly reccommend using it. An important Japanese cultural note: Please fold the Kimono layers as shown (left side first, then right side). Right side first is funeral attire. Kneeling Origami Kimono DollAssemble your materials: You will need: black crepe paper for hair - 1 piece cm x 2.5 cm and 1 piece 4 cm x 3.5 cm white cardstock for head - a circle about 2.5 cm across (the size of a quarter) white cardstock for neck - a rectangle about 1/2 cm x 5 cm paper for collar - three 5 cm x 5 cm squares paper for kimono - one 10 cm x 10 cm square paper for underskirt - one 5cm x 5 cm square Glue ' Step One: Assemble the neck and collar: 1. Fold the three squares in half, into a triangle. Put a tiny bit of glue down the center of two triangles. 2. Layer the triangles as shown above. 3. Flip the layered triangle stack over and glue neck to the center. 4. Begin folding the top left flap across the neck at the angle shown. Repeat with the right side. 5. Repeat until all layers have been folded. You may use a tiny drop of glue to secure your collar layers, if you prefer. ' Step Two: Make the Kimono 1. Fold your 10 x 10 square in half, making a triangle. Fold the top left corner in to meet the center of the right side of the triangle. 2. Repeat with top right corner. 3. Unfold your triangle and position your neck/collar piece. Refold your kimono and adjust the collar as necessary. Secure neck using a tiny drop of glue. 4. Fold bottom flaps up and crease. Unfold and tuck into the "pocket" made by the top kimono layer. ' Step Three: Assemble the underskirt: 1. Fold 5cm x 5cm square into a triangle. Unfold back to square and fold top corner down to center. Unfold to square. Fold bottom corner up to the crease you just made, and fold corners in, as shown above. 2. Fold both bottom corners in and secure with tiny drops of glue. 3. Slide underskirt into kimono pocket, leaving about 1cm showing at the bottom of the kimono. ' Step Four: Create your hairstyle 1. Place cardboard circle on top of 4cm x 3.5cm square, as shown. 2. Wrap hair around circle and secure with tiny drops of glue at the "temples". 3. Flip hair back as shown in picture above. 4. Glue on bangs (the smaller of the crepe paper rectangles. 5. Fold bangs over back of head and glue into place. Final Step: Position head on neck, trimming neck if necessary. Glue into place... You've now created your first Origami Kimono Doll! You can use your creativity in making different hairstyles for your dolls, using shorter hair for boys, adding hair ornaments or bows, or even embellishing your dolls with glitter or ribbon. I kept my doll "as is" and attached her to a plain brown greeting card with one tiny dragonfly floating above her. I think the simplicity of this is beautiful. ' Please come back next week for the next version of my origami kimono dolls. Until then... ' Hugs and blessings~ ~~~Anne
ATC with hand-made Japanese paper doll. Traded to anjen_ca. Materials: Background (recycled card from kezmay - Thanks!); paper cutout; kimono and obi (origami paper); nail sticker on hair.
Esta muñeca de mangas largas se puede utilizar para hacer separadores de libros, tarjetas, móbiles, etc. y también es sencilla de hacer. Es ...
Muñecas japonesas de papel japonés - 手作り和紙人形 - JAPANESE PAPER DOLLS - WASHI NINGYO tutorial diy paso a paso chiyogami yuzen
今日は可愛い花嫁さんの小さな紙人形を紹介します。 材料は大体家にあるものですが日ごろから集めておくとよいものです。 赤と白でまとめて行きます。 花嫁とは 左の黄色の小袋に入れてのお土産。 こちらも材料は付いていません。 あ
Esta es una de las historias que mas triunfa en mis cursos de iniciación, y me gusta contarla porque ayuda mucho a comprender el truco de estas muñecas. En capítulos anteriores, el día de las niña…
Continuo con la serie di bamboline, ancora kokeshi giapponesi da usare come segnalibro o per abbellire un pacco regalo. La base della bambola, così come l'abito tradizionale, sono realizzati in cartoncino e carta fantasia, poi ho aggiunto del nastro di stoffa per fare la fascia tipica del kimono, annodata sul retro. Spero vi piacciano. Altre bamboline kokeshi le trovate QUI e QUI. Sagoma Nel prossimo post un'altra idea per realizzare le matrioske, di seguito vi mostrerò un po' di carnevale handmade e poi iniziano le idee per la festa del papà. Non mancate. Ultimamente ho qualche problema con il PC ma non mancherò di mostrarvi tutto.
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Manualidad con fotografías y explicación paso a paso para hacer una bonita muñeca japonesa con kimono de papel.
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Continuo con la serie di bamboline, ancora kokeshi giapponesi da usare come segnalibro o per abbellire un pacco regalo. La base della bamb...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collection of kimono dolls to decorate a scrapbook page, make a pretty greeting card, or attach to a gift package. Have fun! A couple of things before we begin: I used "washi" (Japanese paper made of fiber so it has more of a cloth-like texture) for the boy doll. I used a paper pattern I got from Creative Park for the girl doll. I simply printed the pattern on plain old printer paper and cut it to size. It worked great, but if you have access to washi, I would certainly reccommend using it. An important Japanese cultural note: Please fold the Kimono layers as shown (left side first, then right side). Right side first is funeral attire. Kneeling Origami Kimono DollAssemble your materials: You will need: black crepe paper for hair - 1 piece cm x 2.5 cm and 1 piece 4 cm x 3.5 cm white cardstock for head - a circle about 2.5 cm across (the size of a quarter) white cardstock for neck - a rectangle about 1/2 cm x 5 cm paper for collar - three 5 cm x 5 cm squares paper for kimono - one 10 cm x 10 cm square paper for underskirt - one 5cm x 5 cm square Glue ' Step One: Assemble the neck and collar: 1. Fold the three squares in half, into a triangle. Put a tiny bit of glue down the center of two triangles. 2. Layer the triangles as shown above. 3. Flip the layered triangle stack over and glue neck to the center. 4. Begin folding the top left flap across the neck at the angle shown. Repeat with the right side. 5. Repeat until all layers have been folded. You may use a tiny drop of glue to secure your collar layers, if you prefer. ' Step Two: Make the Kimono 1. Fold your 10 x 10 square in half, making a triangle. Fold the top left corner in to meet the center of the right side of the triangle. 2. Repeat with top right corner. 3. Unfold your triangle and position your neck/collar piece. Refold your kimono and adjust the collar as necessary. Secure neck using a tiny drop of glue. 4. Fold bottom flaps up and crease. Unfold and tuck into the "pocket" made by the top kimono layer. ' Step Three: Assemble the underskirt: 1. Fold 5cm x 5cm square into a triangle. Unfold back to square and fold top corner down to center. Unfold to square. Fold bottom corner up to the crease you just made, and fold corners in, as shown above. 2. Fold both bottom corners in and secure with tiny drops of glue. 3. Slide underskirt into kimono pocket, leaving about 1cm showing at the bottom of the kimono. ' Step Four: Create your hairstyle 1. Place cardboard circle on top of 4cm x 3.5cm square, as shown. 2. Wrap hair around circle and secure with tiny drops of glue at the "temples". 3. Flip hair back as shown in picture above. 4. Glue on bangs (the smaller of the crepe paper rectangles. 5. Fold bangs over back of head and glue into place. Final Step: Position head on neck, trimming neck if necessary. Glue into place... You've now created your first Origami Kimono Doll! You can use your creativity in making different hairstyles for your dolls, using shorter hair for boys, adding hair ornaments or bows, or even embellishing your dolls with glitter or ribbon. I kept my doll "as is" and attached her to a plain brown greeting card with one tiny dragonfly floating above her. I think the simplicity of this is beautiful. ' Please come back next week for the next version of my origami kimono dolls. Until then... ' Hugs and blessings~ ~~~Anne
ATC with hand-folded Japanese origami paper doll. Made for Kras Arts - Fly Me to the Moon. Materials: Background (Japanese woodblock print); kimono (origami paper); obi (yuzen washi); viscose cord on obi; hair (crepe paper); hair decor (nail art sticker).
Manualidad con fotografías y explicación paso a paso para hacer una bonita muñeca japonesa con kimono de papel.
All-purpose handmade card with hand-folded Japanese paper doll. Materials: Card stock; kimono, obi and decorative margin (yuzen washi); hair decor (Indian "bindi" and nail art sticker). Card size: 15 cm x 10.5 cm (doll height: 12.5 cm).
ATC with hand-made Japanese paper doll. Traded to ATheeC. Materials: Background (Japanese pattern print); Black Soot distress ink; stickers; kimono (yuzen washi).
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...
Manualidad con fotografías y explicación paso a paso para hacer una bonita muñeca japonesa con kimono de papel.
Aren't these little origami dolls sweet? Want to make some of your own? Follow my step-by-step tutorial and you'll soon have a whole collect...