{"title":"How to Make a Paper Bouquet (Rose Arrangement)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/paper-crafts/how-to-make-a-paper-bouquet","category":{"slug":"paper-crafts","name":"Paper Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"The MAW Studio","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-bY80z5HdkcxHZNVxP3hgA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGnkdsb_uxE"},"tldr":"Make a paper bouquet of red paper roses wrapped in black cardstock. 10 steps with spiral roses, cone wrap, ribbon bow. Perfect handmade gift.","totalDurationSeconds":378,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Scissors","Hot glue gun","Pencil (for tracing the 4-inch circles)"],"materials":["Red cardstock or chart paper (enough for 10-12 4-inch circles)","Black cardstock or chart paper (about 2-3 sheets, ~15x15 cm each)","Hot glue sticks (or a glue stick for a kid-safe version)","Red satin ribbon (about 12 inches)","Transparent tape","Scrap paper or tissue for cone padding"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Cut a Red Paper Circle","text":"Cut a circle about 4 inches across from red cardstock. Trace around a small bowl or a roll of tape if you want a clean shape - any round-ish edge works since the spiral cuts will hide small wobbles.Plan to make 10 to 12 roses to fill the bouquet, so cut that many circles. Batching the cutting up front keeps the rest of the build moving fast."},{"number":2,"title":"Cut the Circle Into a Spiral","text":"Starting at the outer edge, cut inward in a continuous wavy spiral. The wave doesn't have to be perfect - those bumps become the rose's petals once rolled. Stop when you reach a small disc in the center, maybe a half-inch across. Leave the disc attached.The disc at the center is the gluing surface for the finished rose, so don't cut all the way through."},{"number":3,"title":"Roll the Spiral Into a Rose","text":"Start at the outer end of the spiral and roll it tightly toward the center. Keep the rolled portion in one hand and feed the spiral in with the other. The wavy outer edge will naturally stack and form what looks like petals as you wind.The tighter you roll, the more compact the rose. Loosen the wind near the end if you want the outer petals to fan out a bit."},{"number":4,"title":"Glue the Rose to Its Base Disc","text":"When the spiral is rolled all the way in, you'll be holding a tight bundle on top of the center disc. Add a generous dot of hot glue to the disc and press the rolled bundle firmly down onto it. Hold for a few seconds until the glue sets.The disc holds the whole rose together. Skimp on the glue here and the rose will unwind in your hand a week later."},{"number":5,"title":"Roll the Black Cardstock Into a Cone","text":"Take a square sheet of black cardstock (about 15 cm or 6 inches on each side). Roll it diagonally into a cone with the point at one corner. Wrap snugly so the cone holds its shape when you let go.Secure the overlapping seam with a strip of transparent tape or a line of hot glue. Either works - tape is faster and invisible against the black paper."},{"number":6,"title":"Trim the Cone Tip and Top","text":"Check the open top of the cone. If it's uneven, run scissors around it so the rim is roughly flat - the roses will sit better in a level opening. Snip the very tip off the bottom point too if it juts out awkwardly.The trimmed bottom lets the bouquet stand upright on its own when you set it down."},{"number":7,"title":"Stuff Scrap Paper Into the Cone","text":"Crumple a sheet of scrap paper or tissue and stuff it down into the cone. Push it firmly so the wad sits a couple of inches below the top opening. This filler keeps the roses from sliding down inside the cone.You won't see the scrap paper once the roses are arranged on top, so use whatever's lying around."},{"number":8,"title":"Wrap a Second Black Sheet Around the Cone","text":"Take a second sheet of black cardstock and wrap it around the outside of the cone. Fold the corners upward so they stick up above the cone opening as pointed flaps - these frame the bouquet and give it that classic florist-style silhouette.Tape or glue the wrap to the cone at the base. The flaps stay loose at the top."},{"number":9,"title":"Arrange the Roses Inside the Cone","text":"Now the satisfying part. Drop the roses one by one into the opening, packing them tight so the heads cover every visible gap. Tilt the outer roses slightly outward and leave the center ones standing straight up.Aim for a dome shape from above - the bouquet should look full and round, like a real florist arrangement. Add a dab of hot glue under any rose that won't sit still."},{"number":10,"title":"Tie a Red Ribbon Around the Base","text":"Wrap a length of red satin ribbon around the narrow part of the cone, just above where it tapers to the point. Tie it in a bow with the loops sitting at the front.The red ribbon hides the seam tape, breaks up the black wrap with a pop of color, and gives the whole bouquet a gift-ready finish. That's it - the bouquet's done."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T02:50:03.515Z","published":"2026-05-24T02:49:48.414Z","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."}