As promised, here is my Paper Bird Tutorial.
First things first, disclaimer time… the artwork I created with this weaving style is entirely my own, however, the concept of the woven bird is quite old. In researching the web I found only a few step-by-step instructions for this style of woven birds. My hope is to provide a tutorial that may be of more help for you. Once you get the knack for these, they are really not too difficult.
Making a Woven Bird
This is the template that I used for this demo bird. It is a 1″ wide strip, the wing is 1½” before the lengthwise cuts are made to form the weaving strips.
Fold the first strip down on a 45° angle, crease, and weave under the second strip, over the third, and then under the fourth.
Fold the second strip down and crease same as the first, weave under and then over the remaining two strips.
The left hand wing is folded same as the right, only upside down.
Flip left hand wing over, and line up the folded edges of the wings. Hint: If you tape your work to a movable mat, you can rotate it to make the weaving easier.
Fold the back of the bird, following the pattern already established by weaving the wings. The back will look like a woven diamond with four strips facing up, and four strips facing down.
Flip work over so that under side of bird is up, tape to work area with drafting tape. The belly of the bird is woven in a diamond pattern as well. Weave the outer strips counter-clockwise, starting with A.
Strips A and then B are bent down and secured temporarily with tape. Do not crease these strips, you will need them to form the 3-D body.
Strip C is bent up and then strip D is bent up and woven under A. The remaining four strips are bent over and woven in following the pattern already established.
This photo shows the bottom of the bird woven, it will be messy until the last steps. The remaining strips that point upward will become the head of the bird. The strips pointing downward will become the tail. Each pair are pulled through the small openings at the top and bottom. Weave the odd-numbered strips through first, then follow with the even-numbered strips. Note: For the nicest looking bird, I like to weave strips #1 and #5 in a slightly different way.
Strip #1 is woven under BOTH strips on this side of the bird. Strip #2 is then woven over the top of #1 and through the end strip only. Same goes for strips #5 & #6.
The remaining strips are woven under the last strip only.
Pull each strip individually to tighten up the body of the bird. This takes some fiddling to straighten up the weaving and to tighten up the end loops so that it will secure. This photo shows what the underside of the bird will look like.
With the bird right side up, tie and flatten an overhand knot for the head. The placement of the head is totally up to you, if you want your bird to have a long neck or a short one. Cut the extra paper at an angle to form the beak (or get fancy and cut an open beak as I have done here).
I curled this one’s tail around a pencil for the spirals shown. You could crimp it with a paper crimper. Or you could just leave it straight, again this is up to you. Note, the knot for the head is what is holding this together, there really is not need for glue. I did find, however, that putting a little dab of a glue stick in between the papers of the beak will make it look more… beak-like.
I created this smaller demo bird out of 1″ wide strips of two-sided 12″ x 12″ card stock. The front of the paper is maroon, and the back is a vintage cream. I chose the two-sided stock for demonstration purposes, but the finished product is very attractive. The paper for the demo was purchased at Artful Scrapbook in Washington Twp, Michigan. The birds that I did for the magazine article were larger, about the size of my hand. They were created with larger art paper purchased at Greens in Rochester, Michigan.