Flag Made From Window Blind Slats

This project would be great for the Fourth, but with the neutral colors, you could really hang it year round. Can you guess what it’s made from? It’s a flag made from window blind slats! Remember Tipsy Tuesday a few weeks ago when I showed you how to shorten your blinds? I used those extra slats for this project.

 

Plum Doodles| Flag Made from Window Blind Slats

 

Supplies Needed for Flag Made from Window Blind Slats:

  • Window blind slats
  • 2 colors fabric, one light and one dark- use heavy weight fabric to help hide the holes in the slats
  • Hot glue & glue gun
  • Upholstery webbing
  • Paint
  • Spray glue (optional)

First, gather an odd number of slats- this number may differ depending on how long your slats are. Just use whatever number gives you a pleasing flag-like rectangle. My slats were 22 1/2 inches long. I used seven slats.

 

Plum Doodles| Materials for Flag Made from Window Blind Slats

 

Cut 4 strips of your darker fabric about 1 inch taller than the height of each slat. Cut the width slightly longer than the length of the slats. I used drop cloth fabric.

Cut 3 strips from your light colored fabric. I cut mine from a white canvas shower curtain I had on hand.

Wrap a strip around each slat and hot glue to the back side. Make sure there is a bit of the slat showing between where the two edges are glued.

 

Plum Doodles| Wrap slats with fabric

 

Trim the excess from each end.

 

Plum Doodles| Trim fabric at ends of slats

 

Alternate your slats with the dark color at top and bottom. Leave a slight gap between each slat.

 

Plum Doodles| Layout of flag stripes

 

Flip them over, maintaining the gaps and lining up the ends. Hot glue strips of webbing about 3 inches in from each side. Make sure you hot glue to the bare sections of slat, not just to the fabric.

 

Plum Doodles| Attaching webbing to back of flag

 

Once the glue is dry, flip back to the front and figure out how big you want the square in the upper left corner. I just eyeballed it and ended up with a square measuring about 6 1/2 inches.  (That dark splotch on the square is just water from ironing the fabric.)

 

Plum Doodles| Determining size of flag square

 

I used the same drop cloth fabric for the square and frayed the edges  so that it wouldn’t blend in too much with the stripes. Don’t attach to the flag yet.

 

Plum Doodles| Frayed square for flag

 

Now you need to draw (or print out) a star and cut it out.  Keep the surrounding paper that you cut the star from.

Place the star in whatever position you want. I wanted mine off center and off the edge a bit.

 

Plum Doodles| Placement of Star

 

Once you’ve figured out where you want the star, place the paper you saved back around the star and tape it into place. Remove the star shape. Now you have a stencil in the correct position.

 

Plum Doodles| Placement of Star Stencil

 

To paint, carefully move the fabric square and stencil to another area. Tape off surrounding areas and paint inside the stencil. I painted with a white spray paint, but it didn’t show up very well, so I went back over it with white milk paint. Craft paint would have worked fine- I just used what I had. I didn’t wait for the spray paint to dry, just brushed right over the sticky paint.

For once, my impatience worked in my favor. This created a textural, uneven look which I love.

 

Plum Doodles| Star Stencil

 

Once the paint is dry (I used a hair dryer to hurry it along), glue the square into place. You can use hot glue, but I used spray glue so that it wouldn’t have the lumps that you get from hot glue.

 

Plum Doodles| Flag layout

 

Now just hot glue or tack a ribbon to the back and hang. I trimmed the seam from my drop cloth and used it as a hanger.

 

Plum Doodles| Flag made from window blind slats

 

Plum Doodles| Flag Made from Window Blind Slats

 

Plum Doodles| Entry table vignette

 

You could also use paper to craft a flag made from window blind slats. What unusual materials have you used to make a flag?

Doodles,

SheilaG

 

 

 

Partying here:

Between Naps on the Porch, Tip Junkie, Home Stories A to Z, Roadkill Rescue, Savvy Southern Style, DebbieDoo’s

Funky Junk Interiors, DIY Showoff

Comments

  1. What a great idea! I have seen so many painted versions, but not on with fabric; I love it! It’s perfect for the Fourth and it looks great on your walls! Another amazing idea! Happy Fourth of July!
    Betsy(@coastal-colors) recently posted..Multiple Layered Chalk Painted Table

  2. Pinning from the Pin the Bloggy party at DebbieDoos. The best part is I love your flag and I would of pinned it anyway!

    ~Bliss~
    Bliss recently posted..Link Party Hot Fun in the Summertime

  3. This is really cute! It was so clever to use the window blind slats and it turned out great! I’ve got to remember to save broken & shortened blinds from now on. Thanks for the inspiration!
    Gina recently posted..Filling a Vacancy (Crooked Planter)

  4. This is just the cutest idea. I love the flag being made in the neutral colors. Darling!

Trackbacks

  1. [...] UPDATE: See what I did with those extra slats! [...]

Speak Your Mind

*

CommentLuv badge