Thursday, August 27, 2020

Tips (No Tricks) For Perler Bead Making



I have been making Perler bead designs for nine years now. I've made well over 1,000 designs ranging from two inches tall to close to three feet tall based on movies, obscure cartoons, and even friends. I have looked at “tips and tricks” that people have written to see if there was something that I could do to make my stuff better or if there was something I never thought of that I could implement into my own designs. Turns out the answer is no. Most are just click bait and offer no useful information for someone currently making their own projects.

In most cases you'll read the same advice just said in different ways. I have written a post before giving some advice for people making designs but now think I could be far more helpful with the advice I can share with folks because I actually do this. I'll attempt to break this down into categories like ironing, designs, colors, and making your designs look clean. Most of this will be things that I wish I had known when I was starting and I have made almost every mistake I'm writing about.

Peg Board & Parchment Paper


When I started I was using the small boards and connecting them when I needed to. I started to realize that designs where getting bigger so I got the large peg board which is what I use primarily unless I'm making something round. In the nine years I've made things I have only used three large boards. The first one I dropped, cracked, and super warped. The second one I damaged some pegs being careless. The one I currently use I've had for about four years.

I know that people use multiple small boards connected which is awesome if you have the space to do that. I make every single design on my bed. I lay here (in my bed right now) looking at the image on my laptop and using one big board. I don't want people to see a design they want to recreate while being new and go out buying things they don't need. As for the paper I use I culinary/chef paper. It is cheap and one roll will last years. Yes, you can make multiple projects with the same sheet. Don't be wasteful. That is one of the reasons why I don't do the tape method.

Ironing


This is by far the hardest part of making a design for me. No matter how great a project you make as soon as that iron hits the paper (or tape if you're one of those people) there is almost no turning back. Yes, I said almost because there have been times when I realized that a bead was sideways, the wrong color, or straight up missing and stopped ironing and let it cool enough to make a change. When someone posts an image of a design proclaiming “Look at this great design I finished!” and it isn't ironed yet I roll my eyes. You started something. It ain't finished.

When you are ironing there is no need to set the iron to its highest setting. Will it make the beads melt faster? Yes. But this isn't a race. After making sure your beads are where you need them to be just tap the board slightly to get everything settled. I like to tap near the top at a slight angle before I lay it on the table. I start ironing at a spot that is either vulnerable to moving (such as a thin or pointy spot) and move from there. Never start in the center because the chances of the beads everywhere else moving increases. From there move slowly and try not to lift the iron up too many times checking. Each lift is a chance you could slam and knock beads loose.

No matter what size the project I place a book on top of it. A big, heavy one. It keeps the design and my board from warping due to the heat. You can be impatient and want to take of off before it cools enough just to take a photo to show everyone and then wonder why it is all wobbly a few minutes later. Let it cool off. If it is a very large project such as my Hulk, ROM Spaceknight, Brock Samson, or Owl Man I made sure to let them cool 100% because they were done in multiple pieces and it is zero fun attaching pieces together where one lifts higher than the other.

Smooth Or Nah?


Some people like to post images with the side the iron touched showing. If that is the case there is no need to follow the next thing I am gonna mention. Flip the image! I have made a few designs only to realize after I had already started that I forgot to reverse the image I was working on. I prefer the side showing the texture of the beads. Aesthetically it looks better to me. This isn't a knock, its a personal preference.

If you are making designs that show the un-textured side you need to make sure to seal all of the holes otherwise it looks cheap. Also, making them this way makes the edges look wobbly because making sure the holes are sealed means using heat for longer which flattens things out. You can clip the sides. I've done it in the past when accidentally mixing beads from different companies. Never do that. I like the textured side. It just looks cooler to me especially if it is on a canvas.

Tools


Besides the obvious things like a board and beads you're going to need an iron, chefs paper, and tweezers. You don't need to buy special Perler tweezers. Regular ass tweezers work perfectly well. You don't need special Perler paper. Just grab some from the grocery store. You don't need a special iron. The one I use was from the thrift store for a couple bucks. This is a hobby that can easily become expensive so saving where you can is a good idea. Speaking of saving money, where can you get the cheapest beads?

I used to go to Joann's for beads. Yeah, they had them at Michael's but there aren't any near me and the selection stinks. Joann's had good ones until acrylic pouring (yeah, I got into that too) became more popular so their selection of beads got bad. I would order from Amazon but would buy things I didn't need just to justify the price of shipping. One day a few months back I realized I'd never checked out the actual Perler site (click here to check that out). So far this the cheapest place to get beads for me. They have a great selection of those weird ass colors that you'd never think to buy but make designs look better. It is less than three dollars a bag once you start adding more and more. The shipping price sucks and you can't speed it up but it is still cheaper than the other places I mentioned.

Credit

My two most uncredited designs.

When you are done with your design if you were inspired by someone to make something or straight up copied them give credit. I just got on Instagram and post my stuff and on this site I give links to the creators if they are available. If they aren't I'll say so. I have had people thank me for the things I have made and a few have had questions. Making something someone else has is fine especially when you're starting. I was so happy to finally get on Instagram and have people link me to designs I have made that they did. I still get salty whenever I see a Falkor that I've made on a site for sale or people saying how hard it was to make and basking in praise from others. If you Google Falkor there used to be two images people would recycle until mine came around. Worse than not giving credit is what some people do on Etsy and eBay where they steal images from my site and others and post it as if they made it and are selling it. Just give credit, have fun, take clear pictures, and don't rush. I am open to answer any question. 

Frequently asked questions.

“How much do you sale your stuff for?”

I don't. I am not joking when I say things end up under my bed.

“Why don't you sale your stuff online? You could make some much money!”

Because I lack initiative and don't care. I just like making things.

“Where do you get ideas from?”

Old videos games. Old cartoons. Sometimes a random thought will pop into my head and I'll see if anyone else has made it and if they haven't (or have but made it wack) I'll give it a shot. Inspiration ain't hard. Initiative is.

“How did you get into making beads?”

I enjoy ironing clothes. My best friend said there was a craft thing that involved ironing. It was that easy.

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