{"title":"How to Paper Quill a Daisy","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/paper-crafts/how-to-paper-quill-a-daisy","category":{"slug":"paper-crafts","name":"Paper Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"The Papery Craftery","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjOExgqTUkxZTpdJCPali4Q","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otntensprHk"},"tldr":"Quill a paper daisy in 7 steps. Make a fringed yellow center, pinch white teardrop petals, and add green leaves. A 20-minute beginner project.","totalDurationSeconds":1153,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["slotted quilling tool","needle quilling tool","small precision-tip scissors","tweezers","ruler","cork work board","straight pins","needle-nose glue bottle"],"materials":["1/8-inch white quilling paper strips","1/8-inch pale yellow quilling paper strips","1/8-inch deep yellow quilling paper strips","1/8-inch leaf green quilling paper strips","white craft glue","wax paper"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Gather Your Quilling Supplies","text":"You need three colors of 1/8-inch quilling paper strips: bright white for the petals, pale and deep yellow for the center, and leaf green for the leaves. Grab a slotted quilling tool and a needle tool. The slotted tool is easier for the fringed center, and the needle tool gives the petals a tighter starting coil.You also want small precision scissors, white craft glue (a needle-nose bottle saves your fingers), a ruler, and a cork work board topped with wax paper plus a few straight pins. The wax paper lets you peel the finished flower off cleanly once the glue dries."},{"number":2,"title":"Build a Sandwiched Yellow Strip for the Center","text":"The center gets a soft two-tone look from a strip with deep yellow on the outside and pale yellow peeking up the middle. Run a thin line of glue along the edge of a deep-yellow strip, then press a pale-yellow strip on top with the pale yellow sticking up just slightly above the deep edge. Fold back, glue again, line it up, and keep going in roughly one-inch sections so the strip stays straight.Now flip and glue a second deep-yellow strip on the other side so the pale yellow ends up sandwiched in the middle with a little fringe of pale peeking out the top."},{"number":3,"title":"Fringe a 4 to 6 Inch Section","text":"Tear off a 4 to 6 inch section of the sandwiched strip. With small precision scissors, make tiny snips all the way down the pale-yellow edge. Each snip should cut through the pale yellow and just barely into the deep yellow. Do not cut all the way through the strip.Those snips become the soft pollen-like fringe at the center of the daisy. Take your time. A fringe tool exists if you want to speed this up later, but scissors are fine for a few flowers."},{"number":4,"title":"Roll and Dome the Fringed Center","text":"Slip the unfringed end of the strip into the slotted tool and roll it from end to end into a tight coil. The fringe might tear in spots. If it does, glue the break back together and keep rolling. The fringe will hide any patches.Glue the tail down, slide the coil off the tool, then use the tool handle to gently push the underside up. That domes the fringe so it stands proud like the center of a real daisy."},{"number":5,"title":"Make the White Petals (8 to 10 per Daisy)","text":"Each petal is two pinched teardrop shapes glued back to back. Roll a 6-inch white strip into a coil on the needle tool, slide it off, and let it relax in your fingers just enough to open up. Glue the tail down to lock the shape.Pinch one side hard to a sharp point. Then give the other side a quick pinch off-center to create a flat bottom with a rounded top. Make a second one the same way and run a thin line of glue down the flat sides so they stick together into one round petal. You need 8 to 10 finished petals depending on how big your center turned out."},{"number":6,"title":"Glue the Petals Around the Center","text":"Lay your wax-paper-topped work board flat. Set the fringed yellow center in the middle. Dip the flat back of each petal into a small puddle of glue (or use tweezers if you prefer) and press it gently against the side of the dome. Work your way around the circle, spacing the petals evenly.If a petal drifts out of place while the glue is still wet, just nudge it back. Small gaps between petals are fine. They actually make the finished daisy look more natural."},{"number":7,"title":"Add Green Leaves and Finish the Design","text":"For the leaves, fold a 6-inch green strip in half, run a line of glue down one half, and press it flat. That double-thick strip dries stiff and works great as both stems and leaves. Cut short 2 to 3 inch pieces, roll each one into a coil, let it open up just a hair, then glue the tail. Pinch one end to a sharp point and bend the leaf gently over your finger so it curves.Make an odd number of leaves in different sizes (three or five looks best) and glue them along a green stem on the wax paper. Once everything dries, peel the daisy off the wax paper and use it to top a greeting card, glue it to a frame, or cluster several into a quilled bouquet."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-08T14:56:22.969Z","published":"2026-06-08T14:56:08.524Z","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."}