Paper Napkin Rose

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Paper Napkin Rose

can be done in a few minutes. When choosing material for work, you need to consider that a finished flower from a dense and multi-layer napkin will be better to maintain its shape, however, it will be more difficult to twist such paper.
1. Spread the cloth on a flat surface.

2. On the side where the bud will be, wrap the edge of the napkin up about 4 cm (photo 2). Position the model so that the fold line is on the left.

3. Bend the top left corner to the top of the model by 1 cm. This edge of the napkin will then be in the core of the bud.

4. Clamp the upper edge of the model with the extended middle and index fingers of the left hand and wrap both fingers with a tissue several times (photo 5) so that the model takes the form of a scroll. Secure the free edge of the paper with the thumb of your left hand.

5. With the palm of your right hand tightly grab the model at the tips of the index and middle fingers of your left hand and evenly compact the paper. A rose bud has formed on the fingers of his left hand.

6. Now, with your fingers of your right hand, twist the paper several times in the same direction in which the fingers were wrapped with a tissue.

7. Remove the model from the fingers of the left hand and continue curling the paper to the middle of the stem length.

8. With your left hand, firmly fix the stem on the twisting border. Gently bend the outer corner of the napkin from the right hand with the fingers of the right hand, give it the shape of a leaf and press the base of the sheet well against the stem.

9. Continue twisting the stem to the end of the paper roll.

10. Carefully, in the direction from the periphery to the center of the bud, turn the top edge of the petals out a few millimeters.

11. The edge of the outer lobe can be hidden under the fold of the previous coil of the spiral.

12. Carefully spread the bud from the inside with your fingers and give the flower a spiral shape.

You can decorate the festive table with ready-made roses from napkins, scattering them in a picturesque mess on a tablecloth or placing them on empty dishes and glasses.

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