These are a beautiful addition to my collection of things to make with book pages. However, you can really speed up the process if you have a rotary cutter (used for fabric/quilting/sewing) to use with your big ruler. You could stack three pages, then cut the one inch strips (no need to mark), then cut crosswise into squares.
Here's some anatomy terms for Pine Cones that no one asked for: The outer parts of a pine cone are called Seed Scales. If you follow the scales to the central stem following the branchlets, you'll find a seed or an ovule prior to fertilization. Pine cones come in male and female variants, too.
Oooh these are gorgeous!! I love them! 💕♥️🩵💕♥️🩵
Thank you Shannon 🥰
Um, Jayne... You are a GENIUS!! Love this so much, I'm sharing on my FB page this afternoon!
Wow, thank you!
Beautiful, and very elegant, made of a simple and humble book page.
Thank you so much 😊
Soooo pretty 🤩
Thank you!!
These are a beautiful addition to my collection of things to make with book pages. However, you can really speed up the process if you have a rotary cutter (used for fabric/quilting/sewing) to use with your big ruler. You could stack three pages, then cut the one inch strips (no need to mark), then cut crosswise into squares.
What a great idea! Thanks for sharing 🥰
Beautiful!
Thank you! 😊
Here's some anatomy terms for Pine Cones that no one asked for: The outer parts of a pine cone are called Seed Scales. If you follow the scales to the central stem following the branchlets, you'll find a seed or an ovule prior to fertilization. Pine cones come in male and female variants, too.
Thank you Chris!😍