Do-it-yourself spider: how to decorate the interior of a room in an unusual way or make an accessory. Spiders made from natural material A spider with a web made from natural material with its own

Repair from ZERO online 03.10.2023
Repair from ZERO online

Filchakova Tatyana

Among the branches spider

I made myself a net.

The web is so light!

The spider has a nice home.

Why not try it yourself? make a cobweb, but you can’t put her on it spider?

Painting with salt is like a magical experiment. This is truly a godsend for children who love to do something unusual. Besides, non-traditional creative methods help the child to relax, enjoy the process and be surprised by the results. Painting with salt is very unusual, but at the same time quite simple.

To create our picture we need

Colored cardboard

watercolor or water colored with food coloring;

brush;

PVA glue;

Drawing technique using salt:

1. Using glue, draw a spider web on the cardboard (you can paint with a brush. Children like to squeeze the paint directly from the bottle and paint with it). We don't regret glue. You can first draw with a pencil, then outline with glue.


2. Generously sprinkle the design with salt. Then carefully shake off the excess salt.


3. Next to the cobweb we draw in the same way autumn leaves.





4. Now we need paints. We will color autumn leaves. Dip the brush into the paint and gently touch the salt-coated glue line. The paint will run on it. You can take different colors in different parts of the drawing until the entire image is completely colored.



5. As a result, you should have such beauty!


In the meantime, our work dries up, we can invite the children to do spider.

For this we need chestnut and plasticine.

1. The chestnut has a round shape and is perfect for modeling the body of an insect. All other parts of the body will plasticine.

2. Pinch off plasticine Make 8 small portions and mash in your hands. These will be the spider's legs. You also need to take a piece for the head.


3. Attach a ball to the front of the figure and press it down. This will be the spider's head. Attach eyes to the small face.


4. Pull all 8 balls prepared to create legs into thin threads. Press each ball onto the board with your finger and roll until you get the desired piece. Attach the legs to the body.





5. That's all. Insect spider from plasticine and chestnut is ready. Now you need to take a piece plasticine and attach it to the chestnut tree so that we can plant our spider on cobweb.



Well, our work is done! I wish you all creative success!

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As was already written in the post below, I need to make a model “In the meadow”, and for this I need insects, I looked in stores and couldn’t find them (Ours.

The craft of a spider on a web made of natural material is simple in appearance, but it looks original and interesting. Yes, and it’s very easy to do.

What will you need for the craft?

  • Thin branches;
  • Dry leaves;
  • For the spider to choose from: acorn, cone, chestnut;
  • Plasticine;
  • Scotch tape, white threads (thicker is better);
  • Moving eyes, but they can be made from white and black plasticine.

How to make a spider craft on a web?

First you need to decide what or what your spider will be made of. There are these options:

You will need plasticine, a pine cone, thin twigs. The branches should not be too dry so that they do not break off completely when bent.

Prepare 6 identical pieces broken off from a branch. Glue brown plasticine onto the cone between the scales.

Place twigs in plasticine to form spider legs. To do this, the branches need to be slightly broken and bent. For reliability, the fracture site can be secured with plasticine.

Next, all that remains is to glue the eyes and the pine cone spider is ready. All my eyes move, but they can easily be made from plasticine. Roll out two balls from white and the same number of balls, but smaller ones, from black plasticine. Glue it on the pine cone and you will get a very funny bug-eyed spider.

Prepare brown plasticine, twigs, chestnut and acorn cap. And also purchased eyes or plasticine ones.

Glue a small layer of plasticine onto the bottom of the chestnut, which will hold the spider's legs and branches. They also need to be slightly broken or bent, and the bend points secured with plasticine (optional).

All that remains is to glue the eyes, the acorn cap and the funny chestnut spider is ready.

Another simple version of a spider made from natural material. It is made in exactly the same way as from chestnut. You will need branches, plasticine, an acorn, and eyes.

You need to glue plasticine to one part of the acorn, and stick 6 bent branches into it. The spider's appearance will be completed by its eyes and nose. I subsequently added plasticine noses to all the spiders.

These are the kinds of spiders you can make from natural materials. For the craft, just one of your choice is enough.

Making a web for a spider from natural materials

Take 3-4 branches, relatively the same size, connect them crosswise. Secure the intersection with tape. If the branches are very thin, plasticine is enough; thicker branches need to be carefully secured in several layers with tape, ensuring that they practically do not move. Otherwise the threads will sag.

Then you can immediately wind the threads, but it is better to first glue the plasticine to certain areas. The photo shows their location. There are many advantages of this action: the plasticine will hold the thread on the branch, hide it, and leaves can later be glued to it.

Wind the threads. I have them thin, it’s better to take a thicker one. You must first wind one tier, from branch to branch, and several times around the place marked with plasticine. Then the second and third. If desired, you can make more of them.

Everything is ready, glue a large maple leaf onto the plasticine in the center - this will be the spider’s nest. And on the sides there are any small leaves - probably the wind blew them into the web. But more for beauty.

The web has been made, now it’s time to place it in the nest of its owner. Here is a chestnut spider on the web.

And now the home and hunting place of the cone spider.

The acorn spider has settled down quite well.

And now the spiders are all together, although in real life the spectacle would not be for the faint of heart.

This is what a spider on a web made from natural material could look like, simple and as natural as possible.

According to legend, spiders cannot be kicked out of the house; they protect the home from negativity and uninvited energetic guests.

Make this cute amulet with your own hands - a chestnut spider and a dragonfly made from natural material will do the job perfectly! A decorative web of threads will never be a reason to think of you as a bad housewife; rather, on the contrary, all guests will admire the original decor! Every novice needlewoman can cope with the task.

Preparation of materials and tools

To create the “Chestnut Spider on a Web” craft, as in the photo, you will need the following materials and tools:

  • two chestnuts (large and small);
  • viburnum fruits;
  • two acorn caps;
  • three cones with thuja branches;
  • five “helicopter” petals;
  • fruits of the Saphora tree;
  • eight wooden skewers;
  • thread with sequins (or any other thread);
  • wine cork;
  • two fleecy sticks with a wire base, dark brown and light brown;
  • a piece of black plasticine;
  • scissors;
  • glue gun


If you don't have some decorating materials, that's okay, use something else or reduce the number of decorations.

Step-by-step master class on creating decor

First you need to prepare wooden skewers to create the base of the craft - the web. Leave the length of the skewers 10 cm (more or less, depending on the desired size of the finished product), sharpen the blunt edges of the skewers with a knife.



Tie a thread to the finished “skeleton” for the web, closer to the center, to one of the skewers. Secure the knot with a glue gun. Then, at the same level, wrap all the skewers one by one, fixing the intersection of the thread on the stick with glue so that the thread holds its shape better and does not slip.



After the first level of web, you need to wrap the thread near the initial knot, fix it and make two turns along the same skewer, lifting the thread up to continue the next row of web. Thus, go around in a circle and drop all the skewers to the edges, do not forget to fix the intersections with glue, especially the last knot.



The web of threads is ready.


Then start making a hospitable host for the web - a spider from chestnut and fuzzy sticks. For the insect cap you will need: a helicopter petal and an acorn cap.



Glue a small chestnut to the edge of the larger chestnut, closer to the top. This will be the body with the head of the spider. Then use fuzzy stick scissors to cut 6 legs of 3-4 cm each and bend them slightly in the middle. Glue three legs to the sides of the body (large chestnut).

Cut off the edge of the “vertical” - this will be the visor of the cap and glue it to the acorn cap, and then to the spider’s head. Roll out plasticine and stick on two black eyes. Cut a piece of light brown stick and attach it around the spider's neck. The spider is ready.


Now it’s time to make your own dragonfly from natural material: the body is from a piece of fuzzy stick, the wings are from “verticals”, the head is from an acorn cap, the eyes are from plasticine.



Start making a dragonfly from the body. To do this, bend the wire almost in half (make one edge a little longer) and twist it slightly (not tightly), leaving a small loop at the base and a thinner end. Glue the head - an acorn cap - to the loop and glue two round, flat eyes made of black plasticine. Glue two “helicopters” on both sides along the edges of the loop - these will be the wings of a dragonfly.


The last guest on the web will be the caterpillar. To make it, you will need the fruits of the Saphora tree (to make the caterpillar longer, they can be glued together). Make the eyes and glue them on from plasticine.



Place the chestnut spider and other inhabitants and glue it to a decorative web of thread.
To decorate the composition, glue a composition of thuja branches and three cones into the center.



Add a few brushes of viburnum or rowan along the edges “for a little sparkle”. The craft is ready.


You can make a loop for the craft “Spider from chestnuts on a web” and hang it as a talisman. Let the spider protect your home, which will always be full of goodness and long-awaited guests.

Other ideas of what are waiting for you in our other publication. Such creativity can safely be attributed to it, because it requires virtually no costs.

Visit us more often and subscribe to the “Women’s Hobbies” site groups on social networks to be the first to know about the release of new master classes.

Decorating your home for Halloween can be quite a task, and you may have to sacrifice the style of your favorite apartment for store-bought items. Chinese trinkets fill your space so unsightly and can overwhelm you with the abundance of black and orange colors.

This year, skip the store-bought souvenirs and make your own Halloween decorations. Not only is it fun, but you'll also save money!

So put aside the huge artificial white clouds of “spider” webs, hanging which you can hardly wash your hands later! We will teach you how to quickly and easily make a web from threads that are lying around your house. And if there are no threads, you can unravel an old sweater and sock.

  • Yarn (threads from any material, all kinds of colors)
  • Scissors (ordinary stationery, for cutting or even manicure)
  • Tape (use tape that won't damage your wallpaper and can be easily removed, such as masking tape)


Tools for thread web

Operating procedure:

  • To start, cut 3-4 long strands (or more) and secure them to the wall with tape (or nail them to the wall). Place them so that they all intersect in the middle.
  • Secure all the long pieces of thread in the middle with a small piece of yarn and tie them together. It is advisable to cut off unnecessary long ends.


Scheme and procedure for collecting webs from threads

  • Then take a long piece of yarn and begin to gradually form a web. Tie one end of the yarn to one of the long pieces of thread and do the same with each of the long pieces.


How to properly fasten and “tie” knots on a web


  • On each long strand, tie a large piece of thread to the strand (using a simple knot).
  • Continue moving from one long strand to the next, twisting and tying, until you gradually reach the very first strand you started with.

Trim any excess yarn ends. Each knot should be sliding so that you can easily move it up or down the thread.

The easiest way to secure it to the wall is with masking tape.

Repeat this step, using increasingly longer pieces of thread to form increasingly larger rings on your web. You can make these rings at a very short distance from each other, or, conversely, further away - it all depends on your mood and aesthetic need.

Only when you have finished weaving all the rings on the web will your spider web be ready!


Select the size and shape of your future web in accordance with the features of your wall, the location of bookshelves or windows.

You can weave a web, combining a variety of colors and sizes - compact white or huge black.

To further lift your spirits, you can weave a web from some bright, juicy threads! Don't forget to add small faux spiders to enhance the spooky effect!

Master class: Spider web from a bag

If there are no threads in the house, then there will always be garbage bags. They make great decor. Fold the bag into a triangle and draw cutting lines with white chalk, as shown in the diagram. We cut it out and that’s it - the web is ready. Cheap and fast.


Scheme for cutting cobwebs from a bag

We fasten the bag with tape on the sides so that it does not slip and cut along the contour with sharp scissors

The original web is ready - you can attach it to the wall using masking tape.

Our festive Halloween web is ready. You can now decorate it with homemade figurines of bats, spiders or flies.

Balls of thread look quite beautiful. They do not require any cash costs or special skills. And the uses for these decorations are literally endless. You can use such webs of thread as independent elements, Christmas tree decorations and even lampshades. From several cobwebs you can make figures of snowmen, birds, and animals. Whatever you have enough imagination for, you can do.

You will need

  • Balloon or fingertip (sold at the pharmacy);
  • Any threads;
  • Any glue;
  • Vaseline, oil or fatty cream;
  • Scissors;
  • Needle;
  • Plastic egg from Kinder Surprise;
  • Beads, sparkles, beads or other little things for decoration.

Instructions

Inflate the balloon to the desired size, lubricate it with Vaseline, oil or greasy cream to make it easier to detach it from the threads later. Make a through hole in the testicle with a hot needle. Pour glue into the egg. If there is no testicle, you can take a plastic bottle and make holes in it

Use a needle to thread the thread through the egg. The thread will now pass through the plastic egg and be wetted with glue. Now tie the thread to the balloon and wind it around. See for yourself how much to wind the threads. Just don't wrap too much or your web won't hold its shape.

After winding as much thread as needed, secure the end with a knot and hang the ball to dry. It should take at least 1 day for the glue to completely dry and harden.

Instead of glue, you can use starch paste or sugar syrup. For the paste, take starch at the rate of 3 teaspoons per 1 glass of water. Stir and bring to a boil;

Helpful advice

You can use thin copper wire instead of thread, then you won't have to bother with glue.

Make various animals and insects from paper many people can do it - the art of origami helps to create from sheets paper almost any shape. However, an ordinary figurine from paper, even complex and beautiful, cannot always surprise the people around you. In order to combine the exclusivity and originality of the figurine with classical folding methods from paper, try folding the modular spider from small dollar bills. The dollar figurine will undoubtedly attract a lot of attention from people around you. Add up from dollars spider It’s not difficult – both a child and an adult can handle it.

Spider webs are the perfect decoration for a Halloween horror party; or use it to scare your nosy neighbor. There are different ways to make a web, and you can be guided by the materials available depending on their level of difficulty.

Steps

thread web

    Cut the thread into lengths to form a rectangle (thread base). The length of the thread depends on the size of your web. A short thread will make a small web, and a long thread will make a large one. The width of the web will be determined by the place where you will hang it, so first measure the area.

  • For example, if you want to hang a web from one tree to another, the distance between the trees will determine the length of the top and base threads of the web. If you want to hang a web on your front door, the width of the door is your limit.

Wind the thread around the rectangle. You will be working on the web in this very area.

Cut out a central circle in the web. Measure out the appropriate length of the center circle based on the size of the rectangle you just wrapped.

  • Connect the segment into a circle.
  • Glue the ends of the piece together at the junction.
  • Attach the web, hanging it on a thread that needs to be tied to the middle of the top row of the rectangle. Secure it by tying a thread to each side of the rectangle until all four threads holding the center circle in place are taut.

    Starting with the warp thread coming out from the center, weave a spiral around the base of the web to make catching threads. Tie a thread to each warp thread. Leave enough space between each layer of spiral warp thread to give the effect of gaps that real spider webs have.

    • If you run out of thread, just leave it as is, then tie on a new piece and continue weaving.
  • Trim the web. When you have finished weaving the spiral to reach the edge of the rectangle, the web is ready. Trim or tighten excess threads and trim the web if necessary.

    • Use glue to strengthen those parts of the web that may be damaged during the process of cutting off excess ends or tying knots.
  • Add spiders. You can take both plastic and fluffy toy spiders. Or make your own from a pipe cleaner.

    Pipe cleaner web

      Depending on the color of your spiders, use either a black or white pipe cleaner to make your webs. And if you want a psychedelic web, you can use any color!

      Twist the four wires at the exact center of each one. Then distribute the connected wires in a circle, leaving equal spaces between each of them. This will give you a web base.

      Weave in a new inch of wire starting from where the wires meet. This will be the start of a spectacular web that you will spin around the web base.

      Weave a web around its base. Whenever you reach the warp thread, wrap the catching thread around it once to secure it, then weave in a spiral. Maintain uniformity and do not pull the bristles.

      Continue weaving in the same manner to create a spiral. Each time the catching thread runs out, simply wind a new one in the same area where the last thread ended and continue weaving.

      Wind the last thread. If necessary, take sharp scissors and trim it. You can complete the web in two ways:

    • Leave some of the main threads coming out of the spiral of gripping threads - this web looks uneven and is typical of cartoon cartoon webs.
    • Weave a catching thread as a border at the edge of the warp. This way the web will look neat and complete, as if a neat spider has been here!
  • For better effect, add a few spiders. Ready. Done!

    Napkin webs

    Take some knitted napkins and make a spider den out of them!

      Take suitable napkins. You can find crocheted placemats in your attic, grandma's junk chest, and at a thrift store. You can also look at online auctions under the names “Craft” and “Vintage Canvases”. Give preference to those napkins that look like cobwebs, but don’t pick on the product.

    • Wash and dry the napkins. If they are initially clean, get to work right away.
  • Paint the napkins with black spray paint. Choose a room with excellent ventilation and cover your work surface with newspaper or other covering to prevent staining. Flatten the napkins and spray them with black paint, going over them several times to ensure complete coverage. Let them dry and then repeat on the other side. Hang the napkin to dry.

    Choose a sheer curtain or fabric. It will act as a background on which the napkins will be attached. It should be hung in a bright place, such as a window. It can also be hung on the ceiling or screen if there is a backlight.

    Decide where to attach the napkins on the canvas. They should be at a distance from each other so that it feels like different spiders are weaving their webs. Baste them with black thread. Use as many napkins as you like to make a great web.

    Tie one end of the black embroidery thread to the back of the napkin. Thread it into the fabric between different mesh weaves. Don't overdo it - a few turns is enough.

    Hang the canvas. Use some embroidery floss to hold the fabric in place and place the spiders on it.

    How to make a children's craft "Spider" from natural material with your own hands. Step-by-step instructions with photos.

    Spider - children's craft made from natural material

    Autumn provides a lot of varied natural materials, which are indispensable in children's creativity. In this article I will tell you how to make a children's craft "Spider" from natural material.

    The principle of making this craft is simple: the legs are made of fluffy wire, and the body of the spider is made of chestnuts, acorns, nut shells, pebbles, cones, etc. You can also use not natural, but waste material. For example, plastic bottle caps.

    Spider - craft made from nut shells

    Materials and tools

    To make a “Spider” craft from natural material (walnut shells) you will need:

    • half a walnut shell
    • plastic (or cardboard) eyes
    • (black or multi-colored)
    • scissors
    • glue or double-sided adhesive tape (scotch tape)
    • thread

    How to make a spider from natural material. Instructions


    Spider - craft made from chestnuts

    The “Spider” craft made from chestnut is done in a similar way. At the time of making the craft, we did not have enough black fluffy wire for it, so the legs turned out to be a little short, and the spider itself looked more like an octopus. But the idea of ​​​​creating an octopus from chestnut and fluffy wire can be used when making three-dimensional crafts on the theme “Sea”. In this case, it is better to take a fluffy wire that is not black, but, for example, purple.

    Spider - craft made from acorns or acorn caps

    A funny spider can come from an acorn or its cap.

    Spider - craft made from stones

    Since spiders in nature come in a wide variety of colors and patterns, the body of the spider can be painted in whole or in part with acrylic paints. Draw circles, stripes on it, or show your imagination and come up with other patterns.

    Or experiment with the color of the fluffy wire for the paws.

    I suggest looking at articles about other crafts with spiders (from rubber bands, paper, etc.) in the section or others (for example, and, etc.).

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    • Christmas tree made from pine cones - a simple craft...

    According to legend, spiders cannot be kicked out of the house; they protect the home from negativity and uninvited energetic guests.

    Make this cute amulet with your own hands - a chestnut spider and a dragonfly made from natural material will do the job perfectly! A decorative web made of threads will never be a reason to think of you as a bad housewife; rather, on the contrary, all guests will admire the original decor! Every novice needlewoman can cope with the task.

    Preparation of materials and tools

    To create the “Chestnut Spider on a Web” craft, as in the photo, you will need the following materials and tools:

    • two chestnuts (large and small);
    • viburnum fruits;
    • two acorn caps;
    • three cones with thuja branches;
    • five “helicopter” petals;
    • fruits of the Saphora tree;
    • eight wooden skewers;
    • thread with sequins (or any other thread);
    • wine cork;
    • two fleecy sticks with a wire base, dark brown and light brown;
    • a piece of black plasticine;
    • scissors;
    • glue gun

    If you don't have some decorating materials, that's okay, use something else or reduce the number of decorations.

    Step-by-step master class on creating decor

    First you need to prepare wooden skewers to create the base of the craft - the web. Leave the length of the skewers 10 cm (more or less, depending on the desired size of the finished product), sharpen the blunt edges of the skewers with a knife.


    Tie a thread to the finished “skeleton” for the web, closer to the center, to one of the skewers. Secure the knot with a glue gun. Then, at the same level, wrap all the skewers one by one, fixing the intersection of the thread on the stick with glue so that the thread holds its shape better and does not slip.


    After the first level of web, you need to wrap the thread near the initial knot, fix it and make two turns along the same skewer, lifting the thread up to continue the next row of web. Thus, go around in a circle and drop all the skewers to the edges, do not forget to fix the intersections with glue, especially the last knot.


    The web of threads is ready.

    Then start making a hospitable host for the web - a spider from chestnut and fuzzy sticks. For the insect cap you will need: a helicopter petal and an acorn cap.


    Glue a small chestnut to the edge of the larger chestnut, closer to the top. This will be the body with the head of the spider. Then use fuzzy stick scissors to cut 6 legs of 3-4 cm each and bend them slightly in the middle. Glue three legs to the sides of the body (large chestnut).

    Cut off the edge of the “vertical” - this will be the visor of the cap and glue it to the acorn cap, and then to the spider’s head. Roll out plasticine and stick on two black eyes. Cut a piece of light brown stick and attach it around the spider's neck. The spider is ready.

    Now it’s time to make your own dragonfly from natural material: the body is from a piece of fuzzy stick, the wings are from “verticals”, the head is from an acorn cap, the eyes are from plasticine.


    Start making a dragonfly from the body. To do this, bend the wire almost in half (make one edge a little longer) and twist it slightly (not tightly), leaving a small loop at the base and a thinner end. Glue a head - an acorn cap - to the loop and glue two round, flat eyes made of black plasticine. Glue two “helicopters” on both sides along the edges of the loop - these will be the wings of a dragonfly.

    The last guest on the web will be the caterpillar. To make it, you will need the fruits of the Saphora tree (to make the caterpillar longer, they can be glued together). Make the eyes and glue them on from plasticine.


    Place the chestnut spider and other inhabitants and glue it to a decorative web of thread.
    To decorate the composition, glue a composition of thuja branches and three cones into the center.


    Add a few brushes of viburnum or rowan along the edges “for a little sparkle”. The craft is ready.

    You can make a loop for the craft “Spider from chestnuts on a web” and hang it as a talisman. Let the spider protect your home, which will always be full of goodness and long-awaited guests.

    Other ideas of what are waiting for you in our other publication. Such creativity can safely be attributed to, because it requires virtually no costs.

    Visit us more often and subscribe to the “Women’s Hobbies” website groups on social networks to be the first to know about the release of new master classes.

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