![]() Step #3: Fold corner C along the 2/3 mark, folding the corner toward the 1/3 point to create the second barn door. ![]() If you’re doing this in a hurry with scrap paper, you’ll find you can be quite casual about it and it will still work. In my template file, I have provided guidelines for you.Īlong that long fold, we’re going to fold two flaps you can think of as “barn doors.”įold corner A along the 1/3 mark, folding the corner toward the 2/3 point to create the first barn door. Step #2: Now, that long fold you made in Step #1 (the hypotenuse of your Right triangle) – mentally divide it into thirds. If you are using paper that has a design on it, the design should be visible on the exterior at this point. (in my template file, I have provided a guideline for you.) You should end up with a Right Triangle (90degrees in corner D). Step #1: Once you have a square, make the first fold, corner B to corner D. You will need to cut off (or tear off) the remaining strip, to turn the rectangle into a square.įor ease of explanation here, we’ll give the four corners names: A, B, C, D. All four sides need to be the same length. Step #0: The first thing you need is a square. (at the bottom of this post, you’ll find a link to download a free template) For purposes of this explanation, I’ll use a piece of printer paper with my Cityscape Seeds template printed on it. You can use any scrap of paper, grocery store receipt, newspaper, junk mail, whatever you have around at the moment. If you’re a crazy seed-saving person like myself, this will come in handy. Here’s how to make an instant seed envelope out of any square of paper.
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