Create Some Quill Art
Green highlight

Make colorful quill art by rolling, shaping, and gluing paper strips into flowers, shapes, and patterns while learning fine motor skills and design.

Orange shooting star
Download Guide
Collect Badge
Background blob
Challenge Image
Skill Badge
Table of contents

Step-by-step guide to create quill art

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

Back-To-School Art Lessons - Art For Kids Hub Collection

What you need
Adult supervision required, cardstock or cardboard base, colored paper, craft glue or glue stick, marker or colouring materials, pencil, ruler, scissors, toothpick or quilling tool

Step 1

Clear a flat workspace and place your cardstock or cardboard base in the middle.

Step 2

Use the ruler and pencil to draw light lines and mark where you want flowers or shapes on the base.

Step 3

Cut colored paper into long strips about 1 cm wide using scissors.

Step 4

Hold one paper strip at one end and tightly roll it around the toothpick or quilling tool.

Step 5

Slide the rolled paper off the tool and let the coil loosen slightly to the size you like.

Step 6

Put a small dab of glue on the strip end and press it down to keep the coil closed.

Step 7

Pinch one side of a closed coil to make a teardrop petal shape or pinch both sides to make a leaf shape.

Step 8

Repeat rolling and shaping to make many coils in different sizes and shapes for flowers and patterns.

Step 9

Arrange your coils on the base following the light marks you made so you like the design.

Step 10

Glue each coil onto the base one at a time and press gently to secure.

Step 11

Add extra details with a marker or colouring materials like stems dots or highlights.

Step 12

Let all the glue dry completely before touching the picture.

Step 13

Take a photo of your quill art and share your finished creation on DIY.org

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

Complete & Share
Challenge badge placeholder
Challenge badge

Help!?

What can we use instead of a quilling tool or toothpick if we don't have one?

If you don't have a quilling tool or toothpick for the step where you 'Hold one paper strip…roll it around the toothpick,' use a thin pencil, the eraser end of a pen, or a bamboo skewer as a safe substitute.

My coils keep unrolling after I slide them off the tool—how can I fix that?

When you slide the rolled paper off the tool and let the coil loosen, immediately add a very small dab of glue to the strip end and hold the coil gently for 10–15 seconds or try slightly thicker coloured paper so the coil keeps its shape.

How can I adapt this activity for different ages?

For younger children have an adult pre-cut the 1 cm strips and pre-roll or partially roll coils for them to pinch and glue, while older kids can cut their own strips, make teardrop and leaf shapes, and plan complex layouts with the ruler and pencil before gluing.

Any ideas to enhance or personalize my quill art?

After arranging and gluing your coils to the cardstock, personalize the piece by layering coils for 3D flowers, adding marker highlights or glitter to stems and petals, or mounting it in a frame before photographing for DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to create quill art

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

How to create an Alma Thomas collage for kids | Art Tales

4 Videos

Facts about paper quilling

✂️ Paper quilling strips come in many widths (about 3mm–10mm), so you can make tiny details or big bold shapes.

🌸 A single quill flower can be made from just one strip of paper curled and shaped into petals—simple but magical!

🎨 Modern quillers layer colors and coils to create 3D effects—quill art can look like miniature sculptures.

🌀 Quilling (paper rolling) dates back to the Renaissance when people rolled gilded paper to decorate boxes and frames.

🤲 Rolling and pinching tiny paper strips is excellent practice for fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination.

How do I make quill art with my child?

To make quill art with kids, start by choosing colored paper strips (about 3–10 mm wide). Use a quilling tool or toothpick to tightly roll a strip, secure the end with a dab of white glue, then let the coil loosen for desired size. Pinch coils into teardrops, marquise, or scrolls to form petals and leaves. Arrange and glue shapes onto cardstock in flowers, shapes, or patterns. Allow pieces to dry flat before handling.

What materials do I need for paper quilling?

You'll need pre-cut quilling paper strips or thin colored paper cut into 3–10 mm strips, a quilling tool or toothpicks, white PVA glue, tweezers for placement, small scissors, a ruler, and sturdy cardstock or craft board. Optional supplies: a slotted quilling tool, toothpick for glue dots, a non-stick mat, and a template or pencil to sketch your design. You can also use recycled magazines cut into strips.

What ages is quill art suitable for?

This craft suits children roughly aged 5 and up with adult supervision. Younger kids (about 3–4) can join using wider strips, pre-rolled coils, and chunky tools, while older kids and teens can handle fine strips and intricate designs independently. Adjust complexity: simple coils for beginners; advanced shapes and layered patterns for older children. Always supervise scissors and glue use and offer tweezers for small pieces to reduce frustration.

What are the benefits, safety tips, and fun variations for quill art?

Quill art builds fine motor skills, patience, color recognition, and basic design sense while boosting creativity and self-esteem. For safety, use non-toxic glue, supervise young children around scissors and small coils, and keep tiny parts away from under 3-year-olds. Variations include making 3D quilled flowers, decorating cards, using recycled paper, adding beads, or trying themed patterns (animals, initials). Encourage kids to plan a color palette and experiment with coil tightness for diffe
DIY Yeti Character
Join Frame
Flying Text Box

One subscription, many ways to play and learn.

Try for free

Only $6.99 after trial. No credit card required