Material preparation: peanuts, pigments and brushes, torsion bars, hairballs, non-woven fabrics and hot melt adhesives. Paint the peanut coat first, and pay attention to the need to dry it before doing the following steps. The color of the pigment is applied according to your own preference or matched according to the color of the torsion bar.
First, twist a torsion bar into a zigzag shape, and then stick a section on colored peanuts with hot melt adhesive at the tail. Take out the fur ball and stick it on the abdomen of peanuts as the hands and feet of the doll. Cut two pieces of non-woven fabric as doll's ears. If you want to make a different doll, you can freely choose the shape of your ears.
Prepare thirteen torsion bars, ten dark ones and three light ones. Take a dark twist stick and twist it into two disks as shown in the figure to make a bear head. Light and dark torsion bars are twisted into an M-shape as shown in the figure, with one end longer. The lower ends of the dark twist stick and the light twist stick are screwed together to make the bear's ears. The dark torsion bar is folded upward, and the number 8 is wrapped around the root of the ear.
Then completely wrap the bottom, fold the light-colored torsion bar upward and bend it at a right angle at the position shown in the figure. Put the finished CD on it and fold the CD on the right back. Take another dark torsion bar, first pass through the outermost gap of the upper wafer, and then pass between the two light torsion bars.
Then it passes through the outermost gap of the lower wafer and is folded in half. The light-colored torsion bar is twisted into a convex disk to make the bear's nose and mouth. Be careful not to be too flat or too close to the bear's head, and try to make the bear's head look three-dimensional and plump. The dark twist stick is wrapped around the bear's neck twice and tightened. The other two light-colored torsion bars are bent as shown in the figure and made into bear limbs. The dark torsion bar is wound on the ballpoint pen core in a spring shape and on the light torsion bar.
Tweezers are inserted between two iron wires to enlarge the ends of limbs and then press them into a T shape to prevent the dark torsion bar from coming out. Connect the limbs together. Wrap the dark twist stick around the bear's neck and fix it. Pay attention to the neck as short as possible and look cute. Wrap the number 8 around the lower limb and fix it.
Finally, wrap a dark twist stick around your body and insert tweezers at the beginning and end of the twist stick to prevent loosening. Layers of winding, winding neatly. When the body is wound up, the teddy bear is basically finished.
Material preparation: white twist stick, pine cone, pigment and brush, cake paper, hot melt adhesive. Draw pine cones with white pigment first, and cover them as much as possible when painting. According to the shape of the swan's neck and head, twist a white twist stick, usually S-shaped, and stick it on the pine cone with white latex.
Cut the wings of the cake paper in half with scissors. If there is no cake paper, you can use white paper instead. A little modification of the swan's eyes and mouth will do it.