"A kite for the youngest who are still too small to fly one on a string," Anna says with a smile.
Print and cut the templates.
Glue together two pieces of design paper with a glue stick and fold the glued-together piece of paper in the middle. Place the wing template at the fold, draw around the template, and cut the wing shape. Repeat three times to make four wings in total.
Cut two butterfly bodies from cardboard.
Using a needle, make two little holes in one of the bodies approx. 0.5 cm from the top with 1 cm space between. Make another hole in the middle approx. 2 cm from the two other holes. Finally, make a hole in the middle at the bottom 1 cm from the edge.
Bring two pipe cleaners through the two top holes and lead them both through the middle hole from the back so they meet at the front. Twist the two pipe cleaners around each other and bring them through the bottom hole. Gather them on the back of the body and flip up the rest, so they are laying gathered.
Gather the wings in two sets. Attach two wings with different prints together with double sided adhesive tape. Fold the wings at the middle and bend the paper at the fold approx. 1 cm from the edge. Repeat with the other set of wings.
Attach the two sets of wings to the body with the pipe cleaners using double sided adhesive tape.
Glue the stick to the back of the body with wings and pipe cleaners.
Glue the other body piece to the stick so it is the butterfly's back.
Shape the pipe cleaners in the front into feelers by bending them a bit at the end.
Attach two eyes to the butterfly.
The finished butterfly can also adorn a flowerpot or be used as a make-believe play wand, the sisters suggests.
Til að geyma eftirlætis vörur þarf maður að vera skráður inn.