CRAFTS Index
Baskets
Beading
Boxes
Candles
Children's Room Decor
Clay
Clothing
Dolls
Faux & Other Finishes
Flowers & Foliage
Furniture
Garden & Patio
Glass
History
Holidays
Jewelry & Accessories
Kids Crafts
Lamps & Shades
Linens & Fabrics
Memory Crafts
Metal
Natural & Homemade
Needle Arts
Organizing & Storage
Painting & Staining
Paper
Books
Decorative
Decoupage
Holiday
Homemade
Invitations & Gift Wrapping
Techniques
Types
Other

Photo Projects
Quilting Techniques
Recycled Objects
Ribbons & Bows
Rubber Stamping
Scrapbooking
Special Days & Gifts
Stenciling
Storage
Tabletop Decor
Toys & Games
Walls & Floors
Wedding
Wirework
Wood & Leather

BEST OF CRAFTS
Puttin' On the Knits
Knitty Gritty
Creative Juice
Sewing for the Home
Scrapbooking: Flowers
Scrapbooking Basics
Scrapbooking: Holidays
Scrapbooking: Vacations

SPONSOR LINKS

  • Tools of the Trade
  • From "DIY Crafts"
    episode DIC-105
    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure A

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure B

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure C

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure A

    Drawing Perfect Circles

    Master crafter Carol Duvall demonstrates how to draw perfect circles using a piece of cardboard.

    Materials:

    Cardboard (use the back of a writing tablet)
    Pushpin, needle or straight pin
    Pencil or ballpoint pen
    Tape
    Pushpin

    1. Cut a piece of cardboard about 1" wide by 11" long (figure A).

    2. Measure and mark the cardboard at 1" increments, beginning 1/4" from the end (figure B).

    3. Using a pushpin, needle or straight pin, push holes into the cardboard at the 1" intervals, large enough to insert a sharp pencil or ballpoint pen (figure C).

    4. Put tape on the back of the cardboard so the holes won't tear or get larger.

    5. With a pushpin on the 1/4" mark to hold the cardboard in place, put it on a surface where a circle is to be drawn, place a pencil in the hole corresponding to the desired measurement, and draw a perfect circle (figure D).


  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: