How to Make Ribbon Rose Accessories
February 19, 2009 by admin
Filed under Bow Like a Pro!
I’ve recently been making ribbon flowers. It started with the daisies I made to match Gymboree’s Daisy Days collection. Fun! That got me thinking about how prevalent floral prints are in children’s apparel (especially our pretty Hannas!) and I figured I should learn to make more types of flowers. When a client asked me to make a bow to match a sweet blue floral dress, I jumped at the chance to experiment with roses. Here’s what I came up with:
And here’s what I learned. There are tons of free “how to make a ribbon rose” instructions on the web, so I have no intention of rewriting them. I found at least three distinctly different approaches. I tried two of them so far.
Next I tried a popular method I’ll call Wrap and Fold (creative, I know). I used these instructions: Offray’s All About Roses. You basically start at the center of the rose and wind your ribbon around the center, folding it back periodically as you go. This is really easy and the only trick is to find your rhythm as far as how much to wrap, when to fold, and what angle to fold at. This you’ll pick up quickly with minimal practice. You can also get the basic premise from watching a few minutes of this YouTube video by sewcrafty1.
Back to the bow pictured above. As you can see, I skipped the stem entirely and just made a ribbon “leaf” as the base of my hair bow, gluing a lined alligator clip to the back of the “leaf”. Important to note: I gave up sewing my bows years ago, and I’m quite convinced that hot glue and wire are the best way to go in most cases. To make my ribbon roses as strong as possible, (wire and stem free) I glued each layer of the rose at the base as I wrapped the ribbon around the center. So I did wrap, glue, fold, wrap glue fold. It was easier than it sounds and, I think, pretty sturdy. The only drawback of gluing is that you can’t later twist the rose from the center, but I did my adjustments as I went along, so it wasn’t necessary.
The larger roses shown are made with 7/8” wide ribbon and the smaller with 5/8”. The blue and white striped rose was printed only on one side, adding a bit of interest. It’s larger than the light blue rose simply because it was wrapped more times.

Design Tip: You can obviously choose any ribbons or configurations. Worth noting, though, that groups of three are generally pleasing, and varying the sizes makes it easier to create a successful composition.
I almost forgot. That Third Method I found is at Burda Style: Valentine’s Flowers. I haven’t tried it yet, but if you do, let me know what you think.
I’d love to see your creations, and feel free to post questions, thoughts, your designs and ideas!

