There is a materials list in the description that tells how many beads overall are needed for the petals. You can string them all ahead of time if you want, just leave spaces of bare wire every few feet, otherwise you will have to continuously push all the beads down to create wire slack when you need it. I usually string 6 or so feet of beads at a time, then reload if I think I don't have enough on my wire for the next component.
When working with continuous techniques, you will measure the bottom wire of the first petal to determine the spacing between. Add a little tiny smidge extra. It might be a little different for everyone, which is why it's best to measure your own petal, rather than use measurements in patterns. You can eyeball the spacing by pulling the second basic row up beside the first petal and lining it up with the basic row in the first petal.
You make that look so easy , good explainations of each step. trully amazing .
Thank you! Glad the video is useful.
Thanks for the video. I waited since you posted that first one 😁
you are very welcome! The rest of the videos for these mini daffodils are coming soon.
Am I missing something? Did you mention about how many beads need to be on the wire per petal or overall?
There is a materials list in the description that tells how many beads overall are needed for the petals. You can string them all ahead of time if you want, just leave spaces of bare wire every few feet, otherwise you will have to continuously push all the beads down to create wire slack when you need it. I usually string 6 or so feet of beads at a time, then reload if I think I don't have enough on my wire for the next component.
I was wondering this also. I don’t have a spinner so takes me a while to thread beads all on. Is 6ft go beads enough to do the petals?
What are you measuring when adding the next petal? It was too fast and I dont know where to start the next one
When working with continuous techniques, you will measure the bottom wire of the first petal to determine the spacing between. Add a little tiny smidge extra. It might be a little different for everyone, which is why it's best to measure your own petal, rather than use measurements in patterns. You can eyeball the spacing by pulling the second basic row up beside the first petal and lining it up with the basic row in the first petal.