Cut Out + Keep

Quilling Paper Cactus

Mini quilled cactus for those with less than a green thumb

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/quilling-paper-cactus • Posted by Meredith A.

Customizable tiny paper cacti with flowers and spikes

You will need

Project Budget
Cheap

Time

0 h 35

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
Medium 2018 02 26 190116 quilling%2bpaper%2bcactus%2bwith%2bflowers%2b%2bwww.thepaperycraftery.com

Description

Customizable tiny paper cacti with flowers and spikes

Instructions

  1. Start with the main body of each cactus. Roll a tight coil from 3 connected strips, each 22″ long. Repeat to make a second coil.

  2. Mold by pushing the center of each coil until a dome is formed. Your fingertips or the rounded end of your quilling tool work just fine for this. But, I’ve recently gotten a quilling mold and I’m really loving it for my 3-d projects. The domes are a lot more even.

  3. I did find that the cacti looked a bit more natural if one of the domes was pushed a little further than the other.

  4. To set your dome, apply a small amount of glue to the underside, and brush so the entire surface is covered.

  5. Glue the two halves together. I also like to add a short strip of green right to the center of the dome to cover the seam where the two halves meet.

  6. Of course, your quilling paper cactus needs a pot to grow in! Start with a tight coil of 3 22″ brown paper strips, made the same way as the green. This time instead of molding a full dome shape, gently push only the center of the coil. The very outer edge should stay together, so it looks like the lip of a terracotta flower pot. Lightly press the bottom of your pot against a level surface to allow your pot to sit flat.

  7. I wanted my cactus to sit up a bit in the pot, as if it was really planted. A balled-up bit of brown Kraft paper did the trick.

  8. Small 2018 02 26 191121 quilling%2bpaper%2bcactus%2bspikes%2b%2bwww.thepaperycraftery.com

    Cut 1″ strips of white quilling paper in half (watch those fingers!) and roll into a tight coil. Once they’re rolled, press firmly to flatten.

  9. Add your spikes to your cactus! I highly recommend getting some Tacky Glue for projects like this. Tacky Glue sticks paper together almost instantly but still moves a bit. Trust me, you don’t want to have to wait 10 minutes holding each spike as it dries.

  10. Small 2018 02 26 191501 types%2bof%2bquilling%2bpaper%2bcactus%2b%2bwww.thepaperycraftery.com

    Have some fun figuring out different ways to make cacti! Some have random spikes; others have spikes in rows. I made a few with simple flowers on top, too! I did make one with arms on the sides that I made from long, bent 3D coils. I only recommend this to those quillers with lots of supplies and patience! It’s a little tricky to get the tubes to bend without completely unraveling.