kerravonsen: Crafty: a medly of beads (craft)
Kathryn A. ([personal profile] kerravonsen) wrote2015-04-25 10:48 pm
Entry tags:

Dere Be Craft

In between coughing and sniffling, I ended up doing unexpected craft today. Using "Hama" AKA "perler" beads. These are the beads you put on a peg-board to make a design, and then melt them with an iron (with paper in between the beads and the iron so that the plastic doesn't stick to the iron). I don't remember ever having crafted with these as a child, but I stumbled across some Pinterest pins which pointed towards their potential for making interesting things, like boxes.

So... I made a set of seven hexagonal coasters on a "Settlers of Catan" theme. And a box to put them in. I am not so pleased with the box; the layers did not end up even. Though I am pleased with the lid of the box, it is a pretty coloured spiral with a thick black border.
And the coasters are pretty good too. Five coasters for the five resource hexes, one coaster for desert, and one for water. Some things were a bit frustrating due to my limited colours; Lincraft didn't have all that big a range when I bought the beads on Friday.

(No, I don't have photos. Yet)

Some interesting things they don't tell you when they entice you with fascinating tutorials:

* If you iron the beads only on one side, the piece curls up; you need to put it underneath weights (like a pile of books) to ensure that it will remain flat until it cools down
* If you aren't careful, the piece will get embossed by whatever you piled on top of it (oops!)
* If you iron the beads on both sides, it is more difficult to make uniform shapes, because the shape is no longer being held by the peg-board, and it will become thinner and spread out more, depending on how long/hard you iron it. Ironing on both sides does reduce the curl, though.
* Even if you only iron the beads on one side, there is no guarantee that the piece will still have holes in all the beads; which kind of messes things up if one was counting on those holes. I was hoping to be able to make some string-art earrings with these beads, but I'm not sure I'll be able to make it work, now
* Some beads are more melty than others. This may be because different manufacturers have slightly different formulas, since I noticed the most difference between the two different brands which Lincraft sells.

I had originally intended to assemble the box by sewing the layers of it together (as shown in at least one tutorial) but I didn't even try that when I saw that not every layer had holes where I needed them to be. So I hot-glued them together instead, but I didn't manage to get the layers to line up properly, possibly because they weren't rigid enough. As I said, not pleased. But it still works as a box to put the coasters in.

Whenever you do a craft for the first time, it usually turns out to be not quite so simple as it appeared...
vilakins: (art)

[personal profile] vilakins 2015-04-25 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I had to look them up: interesting! I look forward to seeing photos.

[identity profile] izhilzha.livejournal.com 2015-04-25 01:58 pm (UTC)(link)
My husband would get a kick out of these; he love Settlers of Catan. I actually did try crafting with these beads when I was a kid, but as you point out, it's harder than it looks and after making a few little designs I kind of lost patience with the "curl" effect.