Video master class craft product weaving table from newspaper tubes for a summer residence paper newspaper glue paint waste material wire fabric paper tubes. Weaving from newspapers. DIY table Weaving a table from newspaper tubes

Tea table made from newspaper tubes

further words of the author



So the leg trudged

To make the leg higher, I inserted a five-liter bottle and weaved approximately to the mark.

4.


I turned the bucket over, we weave to the top5.

She took out the bucket, bent the posts and trimmed them so that they wouldn’t get tangled when weaving. I weave in a circle, making a side like this.

6.

The bottom of the legs is the same, I wove a side, tucked in the tubes, this side gives a kind of stability to the “structure”.

7.

Let's move on to the glass. My glass was rectangular in shape (glass from the door of an old wall), my husband cut out a square and cut off the corners; round glass cannot be cut at home without a special machine. I glued a napkin (reverse decoupage).

8.

We begin to weave a tabletop. I inserted tubes into a cardboard circle, “saddled” it in the literal sense of the word, and went to weave in a circle.

9.

Trying on - weave so that the edge of the circle extends slightly beyond the corners of the glass.

10.

The circle is ready, take out the cardboard and fill the tubes.

11.

We apply glass to the woven circle. This is the back side of the glass, I also glued a napkin to it to cover the white paint, since the lid is removable, even if it’s beautiful on this side. So, we apply and bend the racks and begin to weave in a circle. While weaving, I pull up the posts and press them against the glass.

12.

I wove it to the diameter I needed, raised the racks and wove the side, it will prevent the tabletop from “sliding” on the leg.

13.

Before raising the stands, let's try the legs to the hole so that we don't have to undo them later.

14.

There is a shelf inside the table. This is a plate from a former microwave; you can just weave a circle or cut it out of cardboard and cover it, and insert it inside.

15.

Our table is ready.

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Back in the summer I wove a table for the dacha. For the base I used waste material: a plastic cable reel, cellular polycarbonate, old newspapers. Very good dimensions, as the height matches the armrest of the chair. Below you can watch the video master class, but I describe it in more detail using photographs.

Materials: plastic cable spool, newspapers and newspaper tubes, cellular polycarbonate No. 10, fabric for covering the tabletop, Mocha-colored water stain, PVA glue, acrylic varnish, aluminum wire.

Tools: Scissors, awl, pliers, paint brush and art brush.

Below in the photo is a list of works. The most important thing is preparation. You need to wind tubes from newspaper strips. About 950 of them were used. You need to dye it immediately before weaving in small bunches, when the coil and tabletop are prepared.

The table is based on a coil and a table top made of cellular polycarbonate. Cellular polycarbonate is also a waste material. Its trimmings were left over from the installation of a garden greenhouse. We braid the edges of the tabletop with newspaper tubes, then connect them to the spool and then weave along the contour. We coat the wicker part of the finished table with PVA glue, dry it for a day, and then cover it with acrylic varnish. Acrylic varnish dries quickly - 2-3 hours at room temperature +25 degrees C.

Cut a circle with a radius of 35 cm from a piece of cellular polycarbonate. Polycarbonate is porous, so it can be easily cut with scissors or a kitchen knife. This circle will be the tabletop, which we will place on the reel. This is necessary in order to expand the upper working plane of the table.

Preparing the tabletop. 1.- measure 5-6 cm from the edge of the polycarbonate circle and make holes around the circle with an awl or drill.
2 - paint newspaper strips with water stain and dry.
3 - Cover the edge of the polycarbonate circle with newspaper strips (up to the holes.) Dry, cover
acrylic varnish

Cut a circle with a diameter of 90 cm from the fabric and cover the plane of the coil. We will then place the finished tabletop on this part. The fabric pattern will be visible through the transparent polycarbonate. I took the fabric from an old summer sundress.

Learn more about coloring newspaper tubes. I paint the tubes gradually, one hundred at a time. I paint in an old enamel pan from a gas stove. I put the tubes in a baking tray and pour stain on top and gently roll the tubes back and forth. Then I take them out of the stain and put them immediately in a plastic bag so that they don’t dry out and are elastic. When weaving, I take 2 tubes out of the bag.

We stick tubes into the polycarbonate tabletop. Then we bend them to the edges of the circle. Press down so that they lie flat. These are the posts around which we will weave.

We weave in a circle, starting from the holes. The first row is a bundle of 4 working tubes. Then 5 rows with a rope. And we weave the edge one row with a rope in one direction, the next row in the other direction. The illusion of a “pigtail” is created. We build up the racks and bend them as shown in the photo.

We turn the tabletop over, weave 5cm and place the spool in the middle. Look at the photo.

This table will be very small, so it can be conveniently used as a laptop stand.

You will need

Newspapers, wallpaper, cardboard, white acrylic paint, PVA glue, brushes, knitting needle, rolling pin, scissors.

Progress:

1. Cut one rectangle from cardboard 60? 35 cm, 2 rectangles 35? 40 cm.

2. Cut strips of newspapers 60? 12 cm, roll them into tubes using a knitting needle, roll them with a rolling pin.

3. Bend small cardboard rectangles 5 cm along both sides along the width and glue them to the large rectangle.

4. Place tubes on the cardboard along the entire perimeter, intertwine each row with a working tube, cut off the excess ends, coat everything with glue, and let it dry.

5. Cover the inside of the table with wallpaper.

6. Glue newspaper tubes onto the corners.

7. Apply acrylic paint to the table.

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1. Since there was a fashion for furniture here, I made table braided for knitting from newspaper tubes.

2. So small, mobile, so that wherever the knitter goes, there’s a table.

3. Drilled holes in the cardboard.

4. Done tubes.

5. I wove the base for the table leg. Then I added the bottom and then braided the double tubes.

6. Now we’re all together and weaving upwards. You can, of course, not bother so much and weave from the circle below, but that’s what I wanted...

7. The result was a leg like an elephant’s))) I wanted it to be more graceful, but what happened was what happened, but it was strong)

8. We will make a tabletop - I brought the tubes into a horizontal position and added another one to each one.

9. It’s closer here.

10. Weave in a circle from the edge inward.

11. Then from the edge outwards.

12. This is how you get a flowerpot))
It is possible to make a larger tabletop, but I need a small one.

13. I turned it upside down and will wrap the edge. So it will be stronger.

14. This way.

15. Closed it in the simplest way.

16. Turned over... Bam! It’s not an elephant, and not a flowerpot, but some kind of plumbing)))

17. Making a table top cover.

18. Connect with decoupled cardboard.

19. Weave the required diameter.

20.Front side.

21. Painted flowerpot))

22. Throw the balls inside...

23. And close the lid on top.
Now you can pull the thread out from under the lid so that the cat won’t be bothered))

24. And some useful tips: I had office paper - drafts of my son’s thesis, he retyped it several times, don’t throw away such stuff! I twisted the tubes on a damp cloth so that it would stick to the table.
I lay out the strips, after 5 seconds they become soft, my fingers don’t get tired at all. Then put the tubes in a bag and weave them quickly until they dry out.
And further. At the most crucial moment, the “Maple” stain suddenly ran out, so it can be made up of “Pine”, “Cedar” and “Walnut”.
Good luck to all!


As a keen person, I simply could not pass up this type of creativity like tube weaving. Having mastered the basics of craftsmanship, I decided to create something original and useful and it turned out to be a nice wicker coffee table.

Master class on weaving from newspaper tubes

To make a wicker table from tubes, you needed:
newsprint for tubes, three-layer packaging cardboard, thick cardboard tubes, PVA glue, stain, water-based acrylic varnish, primer, screwdriver, knitting needle No. 1.8, wallpaper remnants, wire, Titanium glue.

Weaving from newspaper tubes

This product required a lot of tubes, and in order not to waste time making them, and at the same time the paper vine looked uniform and neat, I used a screwdriver. I clamped a knitting needle without a tip in the chuck. I cut out blanks 7 cm wide from paper. I twisted each of them into a tube: I applied the knitting needle to the edge of the paper at a slight angle (photo 1), turned on the tool, and glued the very tip of the paper with PVA (photo 2). After painting the parts, it is better to cut this (glued) area at an angle.

I painted all the blanks with a special solution: I added 1 tbsp to 1 liter of stain. acrylic varnish and 1 tbsp. primers. I poured the mixture into a flat plastic container and lowered the tubes there for a period of 5 to 20 minutes. (depending on the required color). I laid out the painted vine to dry (for 3 hours in summer or 10-12 in winter). I placed all the tubes in a bag, leaving a thicker edge of the blanks about 10 cm long on the outside. This way the material remains a little moist and will not wrinkle or crumble during weaving.

Double-layer tabletop made of newspaper tubes

I cut out 2 identical circles from cardboard. On one of them (this will be the upper part of the tabletop) I laid out a vine in the form of rays, glued a circle of wallpaper in the center, fixing the tubes. I wove a rope in a circle (photo 3), alternating blanks of the desired colors to the required size. During the work I glued the risers (photo 4). The lower part of the tabletop was covered on one side with silk-screen wallpaper (they do not allow moisture to pass through and do not allow the cardboard to deform) and holes were cut out for gluing in the legs (photo 5).

Reliable support made of thick cardboard tubes

For the legs, I braided thick cardboard tubes, leaving 1 cm short at the top (photo 6). I didn't prune the vine. I glued the legs into the lower part of the tabletop until the weave stops, and laid out the risers in the form of snowflakes. I glued the tabletops together and dried them under a press (photo 7). I braided the edges, wrapped them on the inside, braided about another 5 cm. Slightly lifting the edge of the braid, coated it with PVA glue and pressed it to the base. The free risers of the legs were braided in a circle and glued (photo 8).

Finishing touches - the end is a spiral of tubes

Additionally, I decorated the end with a spiral of 4 tubes. To better fix the legs, I braided two wires with tubes (first one, then the second, inserting it into the first during weaving) (photo 9). On the inside of the legs, at a height of 40 cm from the floor, I made holes with an awl and inserted a wire structure into the legs, fixing the edge of the weaving with glue (photo 10). Additionally, I wove a round shelf and glued it to the cross. The finished table was varnished.

Weaving newspaper tubes photo step by step

Elena Samuylik.

Weaving vases from tubes