{"title":"How to Make a Beaded Bracelet","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/jewelry-making/how-to-make-a-beaded-bracelet","category":{"slug":"jewelry-making","name":"Jewelry Making"},"creator":{"name":"Bead Spider","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi1InEts9dRahhQ3ue9VThQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnHw7_5eB-A"},"tldr":"Learn how to make a beaded elastic bracelet using the no-glue professional method. Tie a surgeon's knot, hide it inside a bead for an invisible finish.","totalDurationSeconds":506,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Bead Mat","Scissors","Beading Needle (Tigertail wire V-needle)"],"materials":["Stretchy Beading Cord (0.5mm to 1mm elastic)","Beads (4-8mm glass, gemstone, or wooden)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Cut and double the elastic, thread the needle","text":"Cut about a metre of 0.5mm beading elastic. That sounds like a lot for one bracelet, but you'll work with the cord doubled, and you want plenty of slack for tying the final knots.Bring both ends together so the cord folds in half, then push them through a V-shaped Tigertail beading needle. The needle is a thin loop of jewellery wire bent in half - it acts like a giant eye that any bead will slide over."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Tie a temporary stopper knot","text":"Hold the two free ends of the cord together and tie a simple overhand knot near the tips. This knot is temporary - it just keeps the cord from slipping back through the needle while you string beads.The opposite end of the cord forms a tiny loop where the elastic doubles back on itself. Leave that loop alone for now. You'll use it later to close the bracelet."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: String the beads on a bead mat","text":"Lay your beads out on a bead mat in the order you want them. The mat keeps round beads from rolling, so you can work flat without chasing anything across the table.Slide each bead onto the doubled elastic. Push them down toward the loop end as you go. Keep stringing until the line of beads on the cord is close to your wrist measurement, but stop a bead or two short - you'll fine-tune in the next step."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Check the fit on your wrist","text":"Slide the needle off and pinch the two single strands together. Wrap the beaded section around your wrist to check the size.You want the bracelet loose, not stretched tight. If you have to pull hard to close it, the elastic is already under tension and it will give out fast. Add or remove beads until it sits comfortably with the cord still slack."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Cut off the stopper knot","text":"Once the size is right, cut the temporary overhand knot off the open end. You're left with two single strands at one end and a small loop at the other - the place where the doubled cord originally folded.Slide the beads down toward the open end a touch so the loop sits clear with a small gap of bare elastic. Don't push so far that the loop disappears inside the first bead."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Close the circle through the loop","text":"Take one of the two single strands at the open end. Pass it through the small loop at the other end, then pull both strands away from each other slowly.The loop tightens as you pull and gradually disappears into the bracelet. When it's gone, you have a closed circle of beads with two strands of elastic meeting at one point - exactly what you need to tie the final knots."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Tie five overhand knots that travel","text":"Tie a standard overhand knot with the two strands - left over right, through the middle. Pull firmly so the knot slides up against the beads, but stop before the elastic snaps.Repeat at least five times. Here's the magic: each knot travels a short way along the cord instead of stacking on the previous one. You end up with a row of small knots strung along the elastic, not one fat lump. That's why this method holds without glue."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Finish with surgeon's knots and bury inside a bead","text":"For the last two knots, switch to a surgeon's knot. Pass the strand through once, then bring the same end underneath and through a second time before pulling tight. That double pass locks the elastic.Tie two of these in a row, then trim the tails close to the last knot. Pinch the bracelet on either side of the knots and tug gently - the row of knots slides into the nearest bead and disappears. No glue, no visible knot, no rough edge."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-19T14:05:53.134Z","published":"2026-04-29T17:18:33.349Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}