Project: Paper Cherry Trees

I love it when all the flowering trees are in bloom in the spring. All the gorgeous shades of pink and white, like this amazing grove at the University of Minnesota Arboretum.
Crabapple Grove
We are about another month off from seeing anything like this, so I made my own little trees to bring some Spring into my house.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees
My trees are a little more conceptual than realistic, but I think they are so much fun. There is almost something Dr. Seuss like about them. I will admit they are a little tedious to make, especially if you are doing a good sized one. Nothing about making them is hard, but you do spend a good deal of time folding little pink circles and gluing them on. I was so thrilled with how they were coming out that the three hours it took to cover the large one flew by.

These trees are on the smaller side, the largest has a 2″ ball on top and stands about 5″ tall. You could definitely make them bigger to use as a center piece or on a mantle. If I was making them a lot bigger, I would use a bigger circle punch to make the petals.

Paper Cherry Trees

Supplies:
styrofoam ball (or wooden ball/bead with a hold in it) I used 2″ and 1″ balls.
pink card stock
1/4″ round paper punch
styrofoam glue (I like Hold the Foam)
spool
white acrylic paint
paintbrush
dowel appropriately sized to fit in the hold in the spool
scissors or saw to cut dowel
tacky glue (If you use a wooden ball or bead for this project, you can skip the foam glue and just se this.)

1. Punch a bunch of circles from the pink card stock.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees Project: Paper Cherry Trees
Fold the circles to give them a bowl-like shape. I folded them into thirds and fours. These are your flowers. It is a little tricky because you are working with small circles, but once you get the hang of it it moves quickly. I did a bunch at a time, glued them on and then made more.

2. Put foam glue on a small section of the styrofoam ball and start covering that section with the flowers you made in step 1.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees Project: Paper Cherry Trees
Continue until working around the ball. I found it helped to use something to keep the ball stable. For the big one I used an egg cup and for the smaller one I used a bottle cap.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees
Leave a section of the ball uncovered for the dowel. Let the glue dry.

3. Paint the spool white and let it dry.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees

4. Make a hole in the ball for the dowel. Put some styrofoam glue in it. Insert the dowel and let it dry.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees Project: Paper Cherry Trees
Fill in any gaps with more flowers.

5. Cut the dowel to the desired length. Glue into the hole in the spool with tacky glue. Let dry.
Project: Paper Cherry Trees

Later this week, I’ll show you what I did with my trees.

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7 Comments to Project: Paper Cherry Trees
    • DrRuss
    • Holy Moly that is a lot of work but they turned out beautifully. Of course, you know that I love paper projects. I did something similar on a much larger scale. This is the way that I cover pinatas but mine are covered in crepe paper square wrapped around my finger. I can’t even imagine working on such a miniature scale. Well done–as always.

      • Kat
      • Thank you. You know me I love a challenge. I originally was going to use crepe or tissue paper on these but it did not work well at this scale.

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