{"title":"How to Make Tissue Paper Flowers (Easy 5-Minute Craft)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/paper-crafts/how-to-make-tissue-paper-flowers","category":{"slug":"paper-crafts","name":"Paper Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"VIKI Studio Origami","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9L_ZcFAtqA3o3cwo56ejMA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ShuWrxPpKjw"},"tldr":"Stack 4-8 sheets of tissue, accordion-fold, tie the center, cut petals, and fluff. Easy DIY for parties, kids' crafts, and home decor.","totalDurationSeconds":304,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["sharp scissors","pink or color brush marker (optional, for tinted edges)"],"materials":["tissue paper sheets (4-8 per flower)","floral wire or pipe cleaner / chenille stem","ribbon (optional, for stems)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Stack 4-8 Sheets of Tissue Paper","text":"Pick out 4-8 sheets of tissue paper in the color you want. Four sheets gives you a smaller, daintier flower. Eight sheets gives you a thick, fluffy peony-style bloom. For most party decor, six is the sweet spot.Lay the sheets flat on top of each other, lining up the edges as best you can. The sheets don't have to be perfectly square - small misalignments disappear once the flower is fluffed. If you want a multi-color flower, alternate two colors in the stack (for example, three pink sheets, three white) and you'll get a layered ombre effect when the petals separate.Standard tissue paper sheets are around 20 x 30 inches. That gives a finished flower roughly 8-10 inches across. For smaller flowers, cut the stack in half before folding."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Accordion-Fold the Stack","text":"This is the only fold that matters. Fold the stack over on itself in roughly 1-inch wide pleats, like an accordion or a paper fan. Crease each fold sharply with your fingernail before turning the stack over to make the next pleat in the opposite direction.Keep folding until the entire stack is pleated into a long narrow strip. The width of each pleat is what determines petal thickness - 1 inch is a good default. Narrower pleats (1/2 inch) give a more delicate flower with more visible layers. Wider pleats (1.5 inches) give a bolder, simpler look.Don't overthink the pleat width. As long as they're roughly even and the creases are sharp, the flower will look great."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Tie the Center With Floral Wire","text":"Find the middle of the folded strip and wrap a piece of floral wire or a pipe cleaner around it. Twist the wire tight enough that the pleats can't slide, but not so tight that you tear the tissue. Two firm twists is usually plenty.The wire becomes the stem, so leave a few inches hanging off if you want a flower you can put in a vase or wire to a backdrop. For decoration that just sits on a table, a short twist tie works fine.Pipe cleaners (chenille stems) in matching colors are the easiest option for kids' projects - they grip the tissue without tools and the fuzzy texture hides any uneven folds at the center."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Round the Ends Into Petal Shapes","text":"With the folded stack still flat, take a sharp pair of scissors and round off both ends. The shape you cut becomes the petal shape, so think about what you want: a soft curve for round, peony-style petals, a pointed cut for spiky chrysanthemum petals, or a scalloped cut for ruffled carnations.Cut through all the layers at once - good scissors make this easy, dull scissors make it a fight. If your scissors struggle, separate the stack into two halves and cut them one at a time, then reassemble before fluffing.Don't worry about the cuts being identical on both ends. Once the flower is fluffed, small variations look natural and organic - too-perfect petals look fake."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Tint the Petal Edges (Optional)","text":"This is the trick that takes the flower from cute to gorgeous. Take a watercolor brush marker in a darker shade than your tissue (burgundy for pink, deep gold for yellow, navy for blue) and run the tip lightly along the cut edges of the folded stack.The ink bleeds into the tissue and gives the petals a tinted edge that mimics a real garden flower. Press lightly - too much ink soaks through and stains the whole petal. A quick swipe is enough.Skip this step for a solid-color flower and the bloom still looks great. But the tinted edges are what makes tissue paper flowers look like real carnations or peonies instead of obvious paper crafts."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Fan the Folds Open","text":"Hold the wire-tied center between your fingers and gently spread the two halves of the folded strip apart. The accordion pleats fan out into a half-circle on each side of the tie, like a bow tie made of tissue.Push the pleats out as wide as they'll go without tearing. The flatter and rounder you can get this bow-tie shape, the more even the finished flower will look. If the petals on one side are bunched, work them open with your fingertips before moving to the next step.You should now see the layered edges from the side - that's what gives the finished flower its dimension."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Separate and Fluff Each Layer Toward the Center","text":"This is where the flower comes to life. Start with the top layer of tissue and gently pull it up toward the center of the flower. Work around the whole circle, lifting and crumpling each petal individually until that layer stands up.Repeat with the next layer down, then the next, working from the outside in. Pull each layer slightly less than the one above it so you build up a dome of fluffed petals that gets denser as it reaches the center.Take your time on this step. Rushing it gives you a flat, messy flower. Two or three minutes of patient fluffing is what turns a stack of cut tissue into a bloom that looks like a real flower."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Shape the Finished Flower","text":"Once every layer is fluffed, use both hands to round the whole bloom into a sphere. Press lightly from the sides to push stray petals into place, then puff the center up so it sits higher than the outer petals.If the flower looks flat or one-sided, gently lift more petals on the low side until the shape is symmetrical. For a peony look, push all the petals tight together. For a carnation look, leave a little space between them so the tinted edges are visible.That's the whole flower. Cluster a few together for a centerpiece, tape them to a wall for a party backdrop, wire them to a wreath form, or hand one to someone as is. For more colors, repeat with different tissue - yellow gives you marigolds, white gives you peonies, red gives you carnations."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T02:46:02.503Z","published":"2026-05-24T02:44:36.490Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}