Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - A tutorial on making hats from waste newspapers

A tutorial on making hats from waste newspapers

The tutorial on making a hat with waste newspapers is as follows:

1, take a newspaper and put it in front with the short side facing yourself.

2. Fold the paper vertically, pick up the top of the paper and fold it in half to form two equal halves. Many art teachers call this kind of folding "Hamburg" folding, because it is the shape of a folded hamburger.

3. Fold horizontally again and move the upper right corner of the paper to the upper left corner. Then fold the crease. Make sure to create clean creases. Creases will be very important in your next step.

4. Expand the newly created hinge, fold it horizontally from the center, and then expand it. The crease should be formed downward in the middle.

5. Fold the top corner to the center line, take it to the upper right corner and fold it again to ensure that the edge of the paper is consistent with the crease you just made. Now do the same thing with the left corner. Fold it to ensure that the edge of the paper matches the crease you just created. Make sure they are uniform.

6. Fold the bottom and flip. Turn it over and fold the other bottom up. If you want to resize the hat to fit a smaller head or a larger head, please fold both sides of the hat about one inch (depending on the required size) before folding the bottom flip.

7. Open the bottom. Now put on your hat and wear it as you like. Put the flat side forward, it is the pirate hat. Put its flat side on the side of the head and you can use it as a cooked food hat. If you want to make the hat stronger, you can stick the two sides that have just been folded with tape.

Benefits of waste utilization

Resource Conservation With the rapid increase of the world population and the improvement of productivity, the shortage of resources has become a major problem facing the world. Waste recycling can reuse some used items, thus saving the consumption of new resources. For example, scrap metal can be recycled and reprocessed into new products or raw materials, which can lock in metal resources and achieve the purpose of saving resources.