Do you have a stack of old newspapers and magazines lying around? Don't rush to throw it away! Today we will tell you how to weave a basket for your home in just 30 minutes and surprise your family.

By the way, the technique is called “ weaving from newspaper tubes ».

Why do you need a wicker basket in your home?

Handmade baskets give your home a unique coziness. And most importantly, no one else will have such a thing again. 🙂

Wicker baskets can be used to store... anything! You no longer need to rack your brain over the question of where to put paper, stationery and even underwear.

If you put a basket in the bathroom, you can put laundry there, in the bedroom - bedding or clothes, and in the nursery - toys. All you need is to turn on your imagination and devote some time to the creative process.

By the way, a hand-made basket will be a great gift!

Preparing for weaving

You will need :

  1. Cardboard (any old box will do).
  2. Newspapers or magazines.
  3. Glue (PVA) or glue stick for paper.
  4. Primer.
  5. Acrylic paints.
  6. A knitting needle or any other thin but strong stick.
  7. Clothespins.
  8. Any heavy object that can be used as a press.

Step by step guide to making a basket

1. You need to carefully tear out the leaves from the magazines - they should be the same size. Then each leaf is wound onto a stick (diagonally). The paper needs to be lubricated with glue during the process so that the resulting tube is strong.

2. Each tube must be secured with a clothespin until it dries. After this, it needs to be straightened so that it becomes flat.

3. The bottom is the main detail of the future basket. Thick cardboard is best suited for it. You will need 2 identical cardboard pieces. Please note that the dimensions of the basket will depend on their size.

You need to draw lines on one of the cardboard sheets so that you can symmetrically attach the tubes to the sides and corners. After they are laid out, they are covered with a second piece of cardboard, pre-lubricated with glue.

The bottom must be pressed down with a press and the structure must be allowed to dry completely.

4. You can (but not necessarily) place a box at the bottom of the basket so that the weaving is neat. The paper tubes are secured on top with clothespins.

5. The horizontal elements are connected to each other using glue - you should end up with one long tube. You can glue them together as you work.

A long tube must be passed through the vertical ones, alternating weaving “above” the vertical tube and “under” it.

6. Weaving can be finished when you reach the desired height of the basket. The ends of the vertical tubes must be bent inside the product and carefully passed through the loops. Lubricate the ends with glue.

7. Our basket is almost ready! If you want it to be more durable, treat it with a primer. Once the primer has dried, apply acrylic paint to the piece to hide its “newspaper/magazine” past. 🙂

8. Wait a few minutes for the paint to dry and... Start using the basket!

Beauty is a terrible power!

Our basket turned out to be white, but you can make it any other color - just paint the product with colored paints.

And if you use your imagination, the basket can be additionally decorated with fabric and beads. Great, right?

We wish you creative success and inspiration! 🙂

How to make a basket from old newspapers that is a hundred times cooler than the store bought one updated: April 20, 2019 by: anuta-ivanova

Want to make your bathroom cozy and stylish at minimal cost? We know how to get a bright basket for paper or towels without leaving home.


We've found a great way to turn some old magazines into a stylish and spacious basket.
We will need:
Chinese stick;
newspapers or magazines;
glue and brush;
clothespins;
2 pieces of cardboard and a cardboard box;
any heavy object as a press;
acrylic paints.

Let's get started:

1. Take a stack of magazines or newspapers and carefully tear out the pages. It is advisable that they be the same size.

2. Armed with a wooden stick (it can be a Chinese stick or a stick skewer), we begin to twist the pages. We do this diagonally, carefully lubricating the paper with glue.


3. We fix the finished tubes on clothespins and let them dry. Then we straighten them slightly so that they become flat.


4. The bottom is the basis of the future basket. It is important that it be reliable. Take two pieces of cardboard. Draw lines on one and place them symmetrically on the sides and corners paper straws, and glue the second rectangle of cardboard on top. Press the bottom with the tubes firmly with a press and let the structure dry.


5. Let's move on to weaving. Place the bottom of the basket on the box or place cardboard on the sides. Secure the paper tubes with clothespins. This will ensure the neatness of the pattern.


6. Take one tube and begin to pass it alternately above and below the vertical ones, imitating weaving with a vine. Connect the horizontal tubes together using glue.


© Maria Coisitas


7. Once you have decided that the height of the future basket suits you, carefully bend the edges of the vertical tubes, inserting them into the loops, and hide the ends of the horizontal ones inside. Remember about glue.


8. Our beautiful basket is almost ready! All that remains is to give it some shine. To do this, take acrylic paints and use a brush to add color to the product inside and out. For natural effect use two shades and apply paints using a sprayer.

9. A little more time for the paint to dry. And voila! The basket for towels, rolls, bottles and other beautiful little things is ready.

Weaving from newspapers is very popular. The material is cheap, and weaving from newspaper tubes is even more convenient than from wicker.
The technique of weaving from newspapers and magazines is also good because there are no restrictions on the size of the paper “vine”: paper fragments are easily connected and can be increased indefinitely. Perhaps such products are inferior in strength to ordinary wicker baskets, but if they are properly processed and appropriate use is found for them, they will last a long time.

Basics of weaving from newspapers and magazines.

Weaving material.

Main material - ordinary paper. She could be anyone, but best option- magazine pages or current color newspapers (although you can use any). Thicker sheets (for example, covers) can be used for frame parts - for example, corner posts when weaving rectangular baskets or newspaper boxes.

In addition to paper, you will need glue, scissors (or knife), knitting needle (preferably No. 1.5-2) and crochet hook.
The hook is needed to pull the ends of the “vine” between the rows (for example, at the end of work, when you need to hide the edge).
A knitting needle is your main tool for twisting paper tubes. Some craftswomen do without knitting needles, bending the sheet not obliquely, but parallel to the edge of the sheet, but this is less convenient and is more suitable for flat products - curtains, panels, frames, etc. To weave baskets from newspapers, the sheet is twisted obliquely.

Sheet should be rectangular, 10-15 cm wide, 30-50 cm long (a quarter of a newspaper sheet or half a magazine sheet - later you will choose the optimal size for yourself). Place the paper strip on the table (or palm) with the narrow side facing you. Place the knitting needle on the lower left corner of the piece of paper (if you are right-handed! - if left-handed, then on the right) at an angle of 45 degrees and, tightly pressing and holding the paper, begin to rotate the knitting needle.

When the entire sheet is curled, coat the corner with glue and press it to the tube.

Have you noticed that the diameters at the ends of the tube are different?
This is important: thanks to this “funnel” you will lengthen the tubes by inserting them into each other.
At the same time, the difference in diameters should not be large, otherwise the inserted tube will simply “sink” into the outer one.

Make more tubes so as not to return to this part of the work - it’s better to have some extra ones left, they will be useful to you.

Usually craftsmen smooth out the tubes (with a rolling pin, iron), making them flat; some work with round ones.

Weaving baskets from newspapers.

There are different techniques, let's consider one of them. We make the bottom - a cardboard circle, onto which we glue tubes (an odd number!) in the form of “rays”. We'll glue another similar circle on top so that the ends of the tubes are hidden between the circles, and we'll put a weight so that everything sticks together well. When the “sun” (a round bottom with “rays” sticking out in all directions) is ready, the “rays” are folded in, and a form is placed on the bottom according to which your product will be woven.


There are two methods for fixing the “rays” so that they do not fall apart:
tie them at the top with a string or soft elastic band;
turn the structure upside down, press it down with a weight and weave not from bottom to top, but from top to bottom.
Choose what is more convenient for you.
Now we take the working “vine”, coat the tip with glue and fix it (with a paper clip, clothespin, etc.)
We braid the “rays”, gradually increasing the paper tube.
You can fasten them with glue for reliability.

When you've finished weaving the newspaper basket, fold the remaining ends inward, hook them under several layers of tubes and trim the ends. That's it! Now, if you want, paint your masterpiece, if you want, varnish it, if you want, decorate it as you please. Then, if you wish, you can study various ways patterned weaving from newspapers and magazines, you will begin to invent your own.

You can do without a cardboard bottom, especially if you want the product to be completely “openwork”. In this case, we simply weave a mesh. This is the most popular and affordable type of weaving - simple weaving.

We start weaving with elementary mesh.

If the tube ends, you can add it next by inserting it into the end new straw, having previously lubricated it with glue.

Now we decide on the size of the future basket. You need to start from an existing sample, such as a flower pot. The woven bottom should match the size of the bottom of this pot.

Then we begin to braid the side walls of the base.
Having reached the desired height, remove the weave from the base and turn it upside down.

And we continue to weave, but this time the horizontal sides of the future basket.
Having finished weaving, we hide the remaining ends of the tubes in the weaving.

Painting newspaper tubes.

There are two ways:
- paint each tube;
- paint finished product.

Can be painted stain for furniture or acrylic paints. If the tubes are each painted separately, the effect is more natural. For this we use stain. It saturates the paper right through. Then you can twist the tubes however you want.
Acrylic will prevent the paper from being flexible. But it will help imitate straw or vine. It strengthens the paper. Therefore, it is suitable for painting a finished product. Painting the finished product is easier. Blow it out with spray paint and that's it.

I still advise you to use a more “beautiful” method. We spread newspapers on the table. On newspapers - thin cling film, on top - tubes. We put rubber gloves on our hands, pour the stain into the box, and paint it with a foam brush to the desired intensity. Dry with a hairdryer, turn the tubes so that they do not stick to the film. You can start weaving when the paint stops getting dirty.

A simple stand made of rings.

1. We connect the tubes in threes to get a workpiece length of about 1 m for each ring. Lightly spray the material with water from a spray bottle to make them damp and flexible. We twist a tight spiral. We cut the tip at an acute angle with a cut inward. Fix it well with glue. For a newspaper stand you need 42 of these spirals.

2. Connect the spirals. When they are already dry and strong, you can connect them together. We tie adjacent spirals together with the same wet tube. We fix the joint in the center of the spiral. To connect, you can use twine, ribbon, or knitting thread. If you use thread, then thread it into a needle with a large eye and sew the parts together. We hide the knot in the center of the spiral.

From the center to the edge we connect all the parts according to the diagram shown in the figure.

In the photo, the product was painted after assembly. Newspaper wicker can be painted before assembly. Choose a more acceptable method for yourself.

Based on chain mail weaving, a whole art has developed, which is called “torsion weaving”.

You can create unique things without spending a lot of money. A striking example of this is weaving from newspaper tubes. Of course, it will take a lot of time. But, in addition to the satisfaction and joy of creativity, you will become the owner of original and beautiful crafts. The problem with gifts will be solved - you can make them with your own hands.

Preparation of tubes

Before you start weaving, you need to prepare the starting material - wind tubes from newspapers or magazines. You will need the paper itself, PVA glue in a bottle with a dispenser, a long pushing knitting needle or a piece of stiff wire. The diameter of the knitting needle/wire is 1.5-2 mm. These are all tools at the preparatory stage.

Lots of ideas - lots of material!

Let's spin

To make straws, you must first cut the paper into pieces. the right size. We cut newspaper strips or magazine spreads into several parts. Aspect ratio - 1:3 or 1:4 (for example, 27 * 9 cm, 35 * 10 cm). The exact dimensions are not important. Divide the page into several parts so that they are approximately the same aspect ratio as above.

Take a knitting needle and a strip of paper. We twist a corner of the paper around the knitting needle, and gradually, layer by layer, roll it into a tube. Secure the edge of the strip with a drop of glue. To make the tube the desired density, we lay the paper at 45° relative to the knitting needle. Then it will be quite dense, but at the same time it will bend well.

We take out the knitting needle. The tube is not too long; to work, you will have to splice them together. If everything is done correctly, one edge will be thin, the other will be thick and hollow from the inside. To connect two newspaper tubes, drop a few drops of PVA glue into the thick part and insert the second tube with a thin edge. Now we wait until it dries.

Painting and other processing methods

Sometimes, for more simple weaving, the tubes are rolled using a regular rolling pin. They become flatter. In this form it is easier to work with them - stretch them between the rows. But this is an optional step. Try “rolling”, maybe you will like weaving from newspaper tubes more this way.

Not everyone likes the “natural look” of newsprint weave. To improve the appearance, the wound tubes are painted. Best suited for this acrylic paint. It fits tightly, works well with any type of paper, does not flow, dries quickly and has no odor. A water-based, moisture-resistant stain will also work. Paper tubes coated with acrylic varnish, to which a coloring pigment is immediately added, look good. Simultaneously with painting, they become less sensitive to moisture.

Painting each tube with a brush is long and tedious, so they look for a long tray into which the tubes are placed. Paint is poured into it, and ready-made newspaper tubes are lowered into it. Then they are laid out on a layer of polyethylene to dry.

Before starting weaving, so that the “newspaper vine” bends well, you can moisten it. It is better and easier to do this from a spray bottle, simply spraying water.

Beginning of weaving - forming the bottom

In most products, you first need to form the bottom. There are two options: make it out of cardboard, gluing stands to the edges. The option is simple and clear. Perhaps it is better for beginners - weaving the walls is a little easier than shaping the bottom. And so that the ends of the glued posts do not “scratch” the eyes, they are covered with a second similar piece of cardboard.

Among the features: in the corners you need to glue a double number of tubes. One will be on one side, the other on the other. In addition to the above option, there is another way - to stick them not on the corner, but on both sides. In this case, the racks are placed from the corner at a distance of no more than half a step (this is the distance at which you placed the other racks).

The second option is to weave the bottom from newspaper tubes. You will need long tubes - spliced ​​from two or three. There are many methods, they are mainly taken from wicker weaving. The principle is the same - the tubes, one at a time or in groups, are intertwined with each other, forming a center. Then, using some of the lozins, they braid the warp, adding dimension or making it more rounded if necessary.

Round bottom for large items

It will be a little easier if you cross several tubes laid one next to the other. In the photo (see below) we took five tubes and intertwined them relative to each other. To make the bottom less voluminous, it must be flattened. The easiest way to do this is with a rolling pin or a bottle - rolling it several times. To make it easier to work further, coat the intersections with PVA glue.

Next, we take the straw and begin to tie the bottom, passing the straw through three tubes (the rope method). So - through three tubes - we make two rows. Then - several rows - after two. A few is to ensure that the dimensions of the bottom are almost “right” - in shape.

We weave the last two or three rows through one tube. During weaving, the warp tubes must be spaced at the same distance. This is actually how it works, you just need to make sure that the distance is the same.

When switching to weaving the walls, we cross the base tubes one with the other. This makes the product more stable and the transition more reliable. To weave the walls, you can use the working tubes that were used to weave the bottom.

A simple version of the bottom made of newspaper tubes

Weaving from bottom tubes round shape You can start even simpler. Such a bottom will not look so elegant, but for beginners we recommend trying this method.

For a small product, take eight long tubes. Four at a time we fold them crosswise. You can also roll them with a rolling pin and glue the joint - there will be fewer problems at the start.

In the described embodiment, 15 racks are obtained (16-1). If you need more, either add as you weave the bottom, or take a larger number from the source.

Photos and patterns of weaving bottoms of different shapes

As you gain experience, you will want to make products of other shapes - oval, rectangular, multi-faceted. The section contains several diagrams showing how to make forms more elegant and complex.

Weaving from newspaper tubes for walls

As soon as you start weaving products, the patterns will become clear to you. Having gained a little experience, you will learn how to reconstruct the weaving method by looking at the photo. For beginners, we recommend starting with the most simple patterns. This is a rope, and then a pigtail. It won't take much time to master them.

Rope

To master the technique of weaving from newspaper tubes, you will need about five to seven stands. To begin with, you can attach several pieces of thick wire to some kind of stand (a piece of dense foam plastic, for example).

This is what weaving looks like live on a “simulator”

  1. We take two tubes and place them crosswise between the two outer posts. It turns out that one tube is in front of the work, the other is behind.
  2. Holding the tubes at the intersection with one hand, bend them with the other, going around the next stand. As a result, the tube that was in front turns out to be behind, the one that was behind turns out to be in front.
  3. We bend it again, going around the next rack and so on until the end of the row.

That's all - this is a method of weaving a “rope” from newspaper tubes. Already using this technique you can do the simplest things. The product is dense and durable. One important point: for this pattern to look normal, there must be an odd number of racks.

By changing the “starting” location of the tube, we get a different one appearance pattern

If you want to make it a little more complicated, you can take two tubes and go around two posts at a time. But then you need to calculate the number of racks so that the second row is offset - then the pattern will turn out to be interesting. No less interesting are two ropes directed towards each other, and not woven in one direction.

Chess

Checkerboard is another simple weaving method. To do this, you need to take two tubes, placing them one above the other.


This way you can weave a basket, tray and many other products. In terms of density, the product is not as strong as with the previous weave.

If you combine the two methods described, you get a rather interesting product. And if the transition is also decorated in a different color, it will be even prettier.

Shutdown

In order for the product to look neat, it is necessary, firstly, to remove the working tubes, and secondly, to somehow form the edge and do something with the stands.

We fix the working tubes

First you need to secure the working tubes. Usually they are hidden in the weave - in the nearest binding. For this operation you will need a knitting needle or a long wooden skewer.


It's simple and reliable way secure the working tubes. Their ends are hidden in the weaving, but are securely fixed and clamped. For those who are just starting to master paper weaving, this is perhaps the best option.

Weaving the edge - the main technique

Next, you can begin to close the edge. There are many different ways- more or less complex. The simplest one is to do the same as with the workers, but bend them inside the product. But then the edge is not very beautiful. If you want to make it more aesthetically pleasing, you can try the “rod” edge. It is not too difficult for beginners to master, and it looks interesting.

To close the edge with a “rod”, you need an auxiliary tube or you can take a skewer or knitting needle. With its help, we bend the first post to the right, bring it behind the next post and bring it forward. We bend it to the right in the same way, hook it behind the next one and bring two more posts forward. In total, we have three bent.

We cut it with pliers so that 8-9 mm of tube remains behind the stand. To fix this trim, we bend the first of the standing posts to the right, pressing the trimmed edge. Again we have three tubes (bent) at work. Again we take the left one and repeat everything again.

A side is gradually formed that covers the top of the weave. We repeat all these steps until three stands remain: two bent and one standing. It’s easy to track this moment, it’s important not to miss it. This is where you need to be careful. If everything is done correctly, it will be impossible to find the place where the work begins/ends.

Final chords

When three racks remain uncovered, you need to make sure that the newspaper tubes are laid in the same sequence and in the same direction, so that they lie the same way as before. We take out the auxiliary tube or skewer with which we began to close the edge.

Again we take the leftmost tube, in front we go around the last standing post and then, according to the previous weaving algorithm, we need to lead it behind the next post. This stand is already bent and secured. This is the one with which they began to close the edge. We insert the tube from the back, slip it under the first curved post (it’s more convenient with a skewer) and pull it forward, laying the tube like the rest. We cut it off.

Now there are no standing racks, only three working ones remain. They must be laid in the same way as those that are already fixed. We take the far left one, it must be pulled under the third post. Look carefully. This is the first stand that does not have a cut tube near it. Stretch, lay, cut.

We stretch it under the third rack. If you look closely, this is the first one, under which there is no cut tube

We lay the left tube along the top, covering the tubes we just laid. We start it from the back, pull it under the counter, in front of the laid tube.

Here we extend...

We repeat the same operations with the next leftmost one. It must be placed behind an “empty” stand, near which there is no cut tube. This stand is located to the right of the one we just worked with. Here you can’t do without a skewer - you need to slip a newspaper tube under the two already laid (look at the photo).

We lay the tube on top, hiding the cut one above. We start it from the back, put it on a skewer and pull it out. Holding it with your fingers, we rock it from side to side so that there is a place for it and it “lies down.” We cut it off.

You also need to lay it out correctly - repeating the same pattern as before

All that was left was a newspaper tube sticking out. We start it behind the third rack. It’s not difficult to navigate: under the first two there are already trimmings of the ones that were just laid. We insert the skewer under the laid turns and bring it out near the bent post.

Using a skewer, we bring the last rack out and lay it out so that it lies the same way as the others. Now it can be trimmed. The edge of the basket is ready and it is impossible to find where the row begins and ends.

Photo ideas for weaving tubes

Beginning craftsmen master weaving from newspaper tubes on simple crafts. As you gain experience, you want to diversify your products, use more complex patterns. In some cases, interesting-looking weaving is not necessarily complex. Such an example is in the following photo gallery. It contains step by step photos creating chess weaving.

Beginning - we braid two posts The number of turns is at your discretion It is more convenient if the tube “looks” to the right We finish the second row of checkerboard weaving, cut off the extra working tubes and secure their ends Leave as many working tubes as needed

Almost all of us have unnecessary newspapers and various magazines and other printed paper products. Many people try, of course, to get rid of all this, but they shouldn’t do this.

The fact is that you can make a variety of crafts with your own hands from old newspapers, and you can make various things necessary in the house or decorate the interior of your room well.

The newspaper is very easy to process and you don’t need to make any titanic efforts to make any useful thing. Therefore, to make crafts from newspapers with your own hands, you can involve children as assistants, who will have a great desire and interest in doing something interesting and useful.

On at the moment One of the most interesting and popular areas of DIY newspaper crafts is considered to be weaving crafts from newspaper tubes.

It should be noted that this task is not as easy as it might seem at first glance. Here you need to clearly understand all the subtleties and nuances of weaving, and if you study all this well, you can do a lot of different and fun things that will appeal to both children and adults.

So, for example, you can make a variety of decorative boxes, boxes, baskets, vases and decorative saucers, in general, for everything that the imagination has enough of.

This article also presents many bright and colorful photos of crafts made from newspaper tubes.

However, before starting creative process it is necessary to prepare the starting material from which the weaving process will begin.

How to make a vine from newspaper?

Many wicker elements can be combined very well with the interior of almost any room, so most owners of country or private houses would be especially happy to decorate their premises in this style.

However, the vine that is used for weaving can cost significant financial costs, but in this case you can turn your attention to cheaper and more accessible material - these are ordinary old newspapers, from which you can make wicker crafts, while the cost of the outlay will be minimal.

So, before you start, you need to do large number blanks from which some kind of material will subsequently be made interesting craft. Therefore, first the newspaper must be cut crosswise into strips of the same size, after which we take a knitting needle and wind a newspaper strip onto it, resulting in a thin and beautiful tube, and so on until a large number of blanks are collected.

Souvenir basket made from newspaper

One of the most basic crafts made from newspaper tubes is a rectangular or square basket. This design is not particularly difficult; almost anyone can do it.

For making of this product you will have to use a rectangular or square piece of cardboard, you will also need glue and scissors.

So, several tubes need to be glued onto the prepared cardboard form, and the distance between them should not exceed more than 2 cm.

Next, you need to bend each tube upward at the edge of the cardboard, but you need to do this so that the cardboard form is at the bottom and the tubes protrude upward. After which the base of the frame is ready and you can start weaving.

The weaving itself looks like this: from the very bottom horizontally we install the workpiece between the vertical elements and so on until the very top. If the tube runs out, then a new tube is put on its tip, pre-lubricated with glue, and we continue the weaving process further.

Pay attention!

Upon reaching the required height, everything that is unnecessary needs to be firmly fastened somewhere, and glued somewhere well. For a longer service life of the product, it is coated with a special varnish.

Thus, from ordinary newspaper tubes you can make a rather interesting and beautiful basket, which will certainly be useful in the house.

At the same time, when you gain experience and skills in the weaving process, you can make new crafts from newspaper tubes, more complex and simple in shape.

In this case, you can use tubes to make almost any thing that may be needed in the house, for example, a wall shelf for storing small and light items or souvenirs.

Children's crafts

Very funny and exciting activity with paper you can also find for kids. IN in this case We will talk about an interesting style of working with paper like papier-mâché.

This activity will not leave any child indifferent, and the child will learn certain subtleties of working with paper, scissors and glue. And most importantly, the child will like it and it will be educational.

Pay attention!

So, first you need to take the main element when creating paper crafts, this is a plate that will be the basis of the future product.

The plate itself is pre-lubricated with Vaseline, then small pieces of a white napkin soaked in water are placed on it; this process must be done until the napkin covers the entire plate, only after that it is recommended to use newspaper.

The newspaper also needs to be torn into small pieces with a diameter of 3-4 cm, but no more.

All pieces of newspaper soaked in water must be settled on top layer napkins, this operation must be done in several layers, it is recommended to carry out no more than 7 layers.

After each layer, it is necessary to smooth the entire surface with a brush to evenly distribute the newspaper pieces. The last layer is applied with a white napkin, after which everything must be smoothed and leveled again with a brush, and only then the product must be left to dry for one or two days.

Pay attention!

After complete drying, the product can be removed from the mold. It is clear that during the process there could be unevenness along the edges, but this can be carefully corrected with scissors.

And the finished product can be painted in different colors, or apply some kind of design, and finally, a thin layer of transparent varnish can be applied to the finished papier-mâché style plate.

The result will be an interesting and original craft with your own hands from newspapers, which can be installed in the most visible place.

Picture from magazines

Almost every home has old illustrated magazines; some people get rid of them by throwing them in the trash, while others store them and take them to a waste paper collection point.

But you shouldn’t rush into this, as you can make paper crafts from such magazines. In this case, the only thing that may be required is to cut out various pictures from a magazine and paste them on a piece of paper, resulting in a simple picture that is filled with a certain meaning.

Photos of crafts made from newspaper tubes