This wonderful tutorial was created for Sixth & Elm as part of our “Featured Teacher” Original tutorials series by Rhonda Miller, A fellow seller and owner of My Handbound Books.
This little lady can work wonders with a stack of paper, as anyone who has purchased one of her beautiful journals and bound books will see. Here, she shares her secret to a different (but no less beautiful) paper art, origami. For part two, where she shows you how to make a cute book from the waterlily you learned to make here, go to Part 2: Water Lily Book Tutorial, on Rhonda’s Blog., MyHandBound Books.
Origami Water Lily Tutorial
by Rhonda Miller of My Handbound Books
Start with a square piece of paper. Thin lightweight paper is best. Doesn’t matter how big, as long as it is perfectly square. The paper I’m using in the photos is 6” square. This paper is also two different colours, white on one side and orange on the other. That makes the finished water lily a little more interesting than a single plain colour. But it doesn’t matter really.
So, put the paper flat on the table in front of you. (I put the white side up because I want the orange to show on the outside of the flower and the white on the inside). Now fold it in half, straight edge to straight edge, make the crease nice and smooth, then open it back up again.
Then fold it in half again, the other way, open it up again, then flip it over.
Now fold it in half diagonally, just once. Open it up again and turn it back over.
Bring the bisected corners together, push the other corners into the middle, and the paper should fold into a smaller square. Flatten this square and smooth all the folds to make sharp creases.
Place the paper on the table in front of you with the closed corner closest to you. On the right side, lift the top layer of the paper and fold it into the middle – bring the point in to the centre of the square, then smooth the fold. Repeat on the other side.
Flip the whole thing over, and repeat those folds on the other side.
Open one of the folded corners and push the tip in towards the centre to change the direction of the fold – from a mountain fold to a valley fold. Flatten this fold and smooth the creases. Repeat on the other side.
Flip it over and do the same thing on the other side so all four points will be tucked inside. Open it up a bit, and there is your lily, yay!
Now you can make a whole bunch of lilies. I made 5. Then I stuck them all together back-to-back with double-sided tape. The open ‘er up, into a big crazy star!!

For part two, where she shows you how to make a cute book from the waterlily you learned to make here, go to Part 2: Water Lily Book Tutorial, on Rhonda’s Blog., MyHandBound Books.
Rhonda Miller - My Handbound Books
Blog: http://www.myhandboundbooks.blogspot.com/
Online Shop: http://www.myhandboundbooks.etsy.com/
If you would like to prepare a tutorial to publish on Sixth & Elm and promote your store and your art, you can contact me at sixthandelm{at}gmail.com

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