Make Awareness Ribbons
Awareness ribbons are a simple way to show support for something and are often worn on days dedicated to specific causes. Wearing an awareness ribbon can help serve as a conversation piece as well. You have the opportunity to educate about what the symbol stands for, as well as demonstrate empathy for and solidarity with a particular cause.
Contents
Steps
Choosing Your Cause and Ribbon Materials
- Find a cause you care about. The most important step is finding and understanding your cause and knowing what ribbon matches it.
- Often, ribbons are worn in honor of someone you know. For instance, a relative that passed from a type of cancer.
- Ribbons are also worn to demonstrate solidarity with a particular group, for instance Black Lives Matter or the LGBT community.
Of course, if you are reading this article you probably already know what you are wearing a ribbon for. It is always good to understand the cause you represent deeply, as you may be asked about it.
- Choose your ribbon design. Single-color ribbons are simple enough, but ribbons with multiple colors or different designs can be more complicated. Often, a particular cause may have a specific "official" design, but you don't necessarily need to be bound by that.
- You can customize a ribbon by writing the name of a person who is meaningful to you on the ribbon's tail, or trimming in their favorite color.
- The "Eye" of the ribbon is also an area that people like to customize with designs or symbols.
- If you want to follow a particular design exactly, you'll want to seek out the website representing the cause and find their exact specifications.
- Choose premade ribbon or fabric for most smaller jobs. For smaller ribbons, especially those that will be worn, you'll want to use ribbon or fabric as your material. These materials are generally soft, wearable, and tolerate stress and weather reasonably well.
- Choose paper or card stock for most larger jobs. If you are making a larger ribbon to be displayed on a door or in a window, you may want to consider paper or card stock. Since the ribbon won't be worn and won't be moving much, paper and card stock are both cheaper and easier to make large ribbons out of.
- Paper or card stock reasons are also easy to add additional colors to - just use a marker or paint.
Constructing Your Cloth or Fabric Ribbon
- Size your ribbon. You'll need to decide how large you want your ribbon to be. Most simple awareness ribbons that people wear are 1/4" thick.
- When using ribbon or fabric and folding it into your shape, you'll want to cut a band between 2.5x and 3x the total length of the completed ribbon.
Depending on your method and material, this make take some trial and error.
- Cut your ribbon.
- Try to make sure that the angles of your cut match each other on each end of the ribbon.
In most cases you will be using scissors, but you can also use various types of precise craft knives. You may want to make sure you cut your desired lines by using a straightedge or ruler and tracing along your cut.
- Fold your ribbon. You'll need to fold your ribbon. Fold one half over the other half and leave an "eye" in the middle to form the classic ribbon shape. When complete it will look like a "Figure 8" with one end open.
- You can use a tiny bit of craft glue or tape between the two halves to stick them together and preserve the shape.
- You can also use needle and thread, but this is more complicated and is best done by those with practice!
- Decorate your ribbon. You can personalize your ribbon or follow more complicated designs by adding other types of fabric, tassels, sequins, and a number of other decorations. You can also use markers or paint, especially on paper and card stock ribbons.
Constructing Your Paper Ribbon
- Size your ribbon. You'll need to decide how large you want your ribbon to be. Most simple awareness ribbons that people wear are 1/4" thick.
- When making a paper or card stock ribbon size it by simply tracing the ribbon shape onto your material. You will cut this out later.
Usually you will want ribbons that are placed on doors or windows to be larger though. Depending on your method and material, sizing make take some trial and error.
- Cut your ribbon.
- When cutting the pre-traced ribbon shape out of your material, be especially careful along edges with corners.
- When complete, it should look like a "Figure 8" with one end open.
In most cases you will be using scissors, but you can also use various types of precise craft knives. You may want to make sure you cut your desired lines by using a straightedge or ruler and tracing along your cut.
- Decorate your ribbon. You can personalize your ribbon or follow more complicated designs by adding other types of fabric, tassels, sequins, and a number of other decorations.
- You can write a name on the tail of a ribbon, decorate it with a trim of a favorite color, or even add a symbol or design to the eye of the ribbon.
You can also use markers or paint, especially on paper and card stock ribbons.
Mounting and Displaying Your Ribbon
- Use a pin to mount ribbon or cloth ribbons on shirts and clothes. Good types of pins to use include safety pins, clothespins and the pins used to for flowers and boutonnieres. Run the pin through the center of the ribbon and the item of clothing it will be attached to as you would if you were pinning a boutonniere.
- Be careful not to prick yourself or anyone else with the pin!
- Use glue or tape to mount paper or card stock ribbons. Double sided tape is very useful for this, but you can also fold single layered tape into a loop around itself to have it serve as double sided tape.
- Don't use glue to mount a pin to a non-disposable background.
- Display your ribbon. Now that you have made your ribbon you can display it with pride. Draw attention to the cause you are representing and get ready to tell everyone else about it!
Warnings
- Be careful when handling scissors.
Things You'll Need
- Paper
- Marker(s)
- Scissors
- Ribbon
- Pins
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