Excellent tips thankyou, wondered how to cut the corks without them crumbling...so now I know...yeh! I have been saving pretty ones for a while, gonna make a big one to save my wooden table from hot bake dishes! Cheers!
FINALLY a good wine cork coaster tutorial! Thank you so much for taking the time to put this together. I'm going to the craft store shortly to pick up the cork tiles - I hope to get to the project today. Thanks again!
+Darcy Crowley - I'm so glad you liked it This was rather fun and easy to do, so I'm sure you'll enjoy it. I would love to see pictures of your coasters when you finish. Happy Crafting!
Thanks for watching. Yeah, they're really fun easy to make. I have seen these done in a variety of styles, but I think this is the easiest when you have simple tools.
shelley wolf - Thanks for watching. I honestly don't know if e6000 would work or not. Off the top of my head, one of the benefits to using hot glue is that it sets fast. E6000 has to sit for 24 hours to actually set and your corks would move around if you didn't put something on them like a book. This would also require you to find a place to lay them all flat. I guess it's just more inconvenient than anything. Structurally, i can't see why one glue would habe an edge over the other, but please post a comment if you try it. I'd love to kniw how it eirks for you.
F Ribeiro - I got the cork boards at Michael's craft store. I think it would be really difficult to try this without a surface to glue the corks on and the glue would show. But I'm sure anything's possible. Thanks for watching!
Thank you! You can get corks at Whole Foods for free. Some stores like that one have a cork recycling bin. If you ask management they will usually just let you have as many as you want. Other than that, I think you can buy them at any craft store, but I like free so I'd try the first option before you spend money. Hope this helps.
Hello. You're not the firsr person to pose this question. The truth is I've never used it, so i honestly don't know. I will say that one of the reasons i use hot glue is that it sets fast. E6000 takes hours to set, so you'd need a place to leave your project while they dried. I can't imagine that they would differ structurally, but the actual construction would be a pain with e6000. I hope this helps and Happy Crafting.
You go'ta be kidding me........I wanted to see HOW YOU CUT THE CORKS...but you omitted that part...."I'll be right back"....then they were all cut. What the bleep??? all the gabbing about boiling in hot water too too too too long.....then omitted the cutting part.
Roxanne Gordon - There's no need to be nasty. All you have to do is ask 😊. I had no way to hold the camera and cut the corks. I used a serrated steak knife, held the corks between two fingers and cut down. You want to do this while the corks are still hot so use something to protect your fingers. Good Luck!
Thank you for the very informative video. Loved it!
Great video thank you for explaining everything in detail
No problem. Happy crafting
Excellent tips thankyou, wondered how to cut the corks without them crumbling...so now I know...yeh! I have been saving pretty ones for a while, gonna make a big one to save my wooden table from hot bake dishes! Cheers!
Helen Fay - I'm glad my video helped you out. Happy crafting!
FINALLY a good wine cork coaster tutorial! Thank you so much for taking the time to put this together. I'm going to the craft store shortly to pick up the cork tiles - I hope to get to the project today. Thanks again!
+Darcy Crowley - I'm so glad you liked it This was rather fun and easy to do, so I'm sure you'll enjoy it. I would love to see pictures of your coasters when you finish. Happy Crafting!
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We are already working with the cork coasters, adding these wine corks is something we can try. Thank you for the tips and the video.
Thank you s much for posting this! I am totally making these for Christmas gifts this year!
Thank you OceanSiren. I will try Whole Foods and perhaps my local spirits shops. Can't wait to create something like yours.
Good luck and Happy Crafting!
Thanks for publishing this video. I really needed some help.
I'm glad it was helpful. please message me if you come across a problem I didn't cover. Happy Crafting!
Very cool. I've seen people make these before. I've also seen cork boards made like this on Pintrest.
Thanks for watching. Yeah, they're really fun easy to make. I have seen these done in a variety of styles, but I think this is the easiest when you have simple tools.
The boiling water trick is good to know. Thanks.
I plan to put corks inside ceramic holders.
Awesome video with excellent tips!
I would also like to know if e6000 glue would work? I will be trying to make some for favors at a wine tasting lots of good information, thanks
shelley wolf - Thanks for watching. I honestly don't know if e6000 would work or not. Off the top of my head, one of the benefits to using hot glue is that it sets fast. E6000 has to sit for 24 hours to actually set and your corks would move around if you didn't put something on them like a book. This would also require you to find a place to lay them all flat. I guess it's just more inconvenient than anything. Structurally, i can't see why one glue would habe an edge over the other, but please post a comment if you try it. I'd love to kniw how it eirks for you.
Great idea, I have a ton of corks
great job
Muy buena idea...
hello how important is it to use hot glue is it ok in your personal
opinion to use super glue?
Hi! Very clear video! Congrats! Where did you get the cork tiles? Is it absolutely necessary or I can just use glue between the cork halfs?? Thank you
F Ribeiro - I got the cork boards at Michael's craft store. I think it would be really difficult to try this without a surface to glue the corks on and the glue would show. But I'm sure anything's possible. Thanks for watching!
What did you use to cut the cork board?
I marked a line with a sharpie and cut slowly with sharp scissors. I hope this helps.
HOT GLUE DOESN'T DRY. IT COOLS.
Excellent video. Where can I buy corks?
Thank you! You can get corks at Whole Foods for free. Some stores like that one have a cork recycling bin. If you ask management they will usually just let you have as many as you want. Other than that, I think you can buy them at any craft store, but I like free so I'd try the first option before you spend money. Hope this helps.
Would e 6000 work?
Hello. You're not the firsr person to pose this question. The truth is I've never used it, so i honestly don't know. I will say that one of the reasons i use hot glue is that it sets fast. E6000 takes hours to set, so you'd need a place to leave your project while they dried. I can't imagine that they would differ structurally, but the actual construction would be a pain with e6000. I hope this helps and Happy Crafting.
add..a coe with gold fiss
Check woodprix mates. I love it to my wooden projects.
You paused at the most critical time. Was purely looking to see how you cut them vertically. FAIL.
Тупо, снимать такой длинный ролик, устал перематывать. И не показано, как пробки ровно режутся ножом :-)
You go'ta be kidding me........I wanted to see HOW YOU CUT THE CORKS...but you omitted that part...."I'll be right back"....then they were all cut. What the bleep???
all the gabbing about boiling in hot water too too too too long.....then omitted the cutting part.
Roxanne Gordon - There's no need to be nasty. All you have to do is ask 😊. I had no way to hold the camera and cut the corks. I used a serrated steak knife, held the corks between two fingers and cut down. You want to do this while the corks are still hot so use something to protect your fingers. Good Luck!