DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portraits With Printable Templates

I actually thought long and hard about whether or not to share this story with you all—main reason being that it turns out DIY wire portraits are a lot harder to make than you might think! Let’s just say that I have a whole new respect for wire portrait artists who do this regularly. The good news, though, is that I have a totally original piece of handmade art to show for my efforts, plus I managed to experiment with a brand new process that I think I’ll have fun building on in the future.

But I’m getting ahead of myself…It all started when Sarah Sherman Samuel mentioned on her website that she had made a couple of wire portraits of herself and her husband using a wedding portrait as her inspiration. Sarah explained that she used this tutorial via The House That Lars Built to guide her project, and I loved the finished look. It seemed really straightforward, so I added it to my looooooong list of DIYs to try, and then finally found time to give it a shot this past week.

Scroll on for my process, including a couple of missteps that I hope you guys can avoid if you decide to try the project out for yourselves. I promise it’s worth it!

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

Here’s What You’ll Need:

  • Wire
  • Printable templates (I link to the three I created below)
  • Wire cutters
  • Foam core board
  • Pushpins
  • Clear tape for hanging it on the wall

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

The first thing you need is a portrait photo. I wanted to do something really unique (but not necessarily of ourselves), so I went online and Googled phrases like “magazine portrait ad.” All sorts of close-up faces filled my screen, but I chose three of my favorites, zoomed in, and then put a piece of regular computer paper up to the screen.

Next, I traced over the outlines that I could see through the glow of my computer’s monitor without lifting my marker, and the three drawings you see above are the results. You’re welcome to follow my tracing process with a couple of your own family portraits, or feel free to download the original drawings I made using these links: one, two, three.

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

After that, it’s really just a matter of following the lines with your wire to make the portrait. I started out practicing with thicker wire, but ultimately found that it was just too thick for the look I was going for. I thought it would be good for me to include process photos of what I managed to come up with in case you like the simpler, rounded silhouette (see those above), but I wanted my finished wire portrait to have sharper details, so I quickly moved on to thinner wire.

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

Using nothing but my fingertips (and a lot of patience), I bent the wire back and forth along the lines of my template. The key, I think, is to unroll a good bit of wire from the roll, and to not cut it until the end—just use one long piece of wire to build the entire portrait, unraveling more as you need to. Doing things this way means that you don’t have to form any connections, which ultimately weaken the strength of the shape.

At one point toward the end, I got a little frustrated with how the wire was flopping all over the place, so I grabbed some pushpins to hold the wire in place over the paper template. I had been working on a piece of foam core board, so I just pushed the pins right into the foam. This definitely helped the wire stay in place, but I would warn you not to use the pushpins to try to build the portrait itself. Wait until the end to use them just to keep the shape as you finish up the portrait because those finer details are best created slowly using your fingers to bend the wire into place.

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

The reason I caution you not to rely on the pushpins is that, at one point, I thought maybe I could build the entire portrait around the pushpins, but it didn’t work. As soon as I pulled the pins out of my second wire portrait attempt, the wire just came loose. The pins held it taut and made it easier to work with, but, again, the strength of these portraits really comes down to shaping and bending things with your fingers, and making adjustments after you see how the wire naturally lays without the help of pins.

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

I get the feeling that, after reading this twisty-turny story, nobody is going to want to try making wire portraits…but I really hope that’s not the case! It’s definitely a process and you have to take things one line at a time, but my finished portrait is exactly what I had in mind when I started out. I think next time I’ll try making it a little larger so it stands out more on the wall, and I might also reconsider how I hang it. Putting it in a frame behind glass, for example, would keep the wire in place without much fuss at all.

Would you give this slightly more advanced DIY a try? I really encourage you to give it a shot! I especially love that, even if we all used the same template, no two wire portraits would look exactly the same. Let me know if you give the project a try or (better yet!) if you can suggest a more logical process for bringing it to life.

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

DIY Wire Portrait With Printable Template

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Healthy Habits I’m Adopting This Summer

Healthy Habits I'm Adopting This Summer

The original intent for this post was a rundown of how I’m incorporating exercise into my routine ahead of bikini season, but then I stopped to actually think about how I was doing that. The truth is I’m not great at exercising. I’m downright terrible at it, to be honest, so anything I might have said on the topic would probably not have been based on reality. (I guess that’s what I get for trying to plan my editorial calendar out for the year in January when I was feeling motivated to actually start excising, ha!)

Anyway, after admitting all of this to myself I started reframing my ideas for this post and thought about how I could be authentic on the topic of health. What I came up with is a breakdown of all the things I’m doing to be healthier this summer season—whether that’s the food I’m eating, the thoughts I’m filling my head with (mental health counts, too, after all!), and also the bits of exercise I think I can really, truly work into my routine.

Healthy Habits I'm Adopting This Summer

Healthy Habits I’m Adopting This Summer

1. Food and snacks: Whenever I feel like I’ve accomplished something and deserve a treat, I’m kind of notorious for defaulting to fast food. I know…I know…I’m a little ashamed about that guilty pleasure, but I just love indulging in a Chick-fil-A biscuit or a waffle cone from the drive-in ice cream joint here in town. It really only happens a few times a month, but I still would love to limit this habit to once a month or not at all. This summer I want to make Farmers Market trips a weekly occasion to stock up on fresh local produce, and I’m also going to keep things like organic granola bars handy in the cabinet so I don’t reach for something bread-y or processed. Wish me luck since this is going to be a hard habit to break!

2. Thinking healthy thoughts: Right around Christmas I had mentioned that I purchased this gratitude journal for myself. I was doing a good job notating the three things I was grateful for every day but then, right around April, I broke the habit on a particularly rough day and haven’t picked it back up since. I’m going to recommit myself to the habit starting now because I find that thinking happy, grateful thoughts has a direct impact on my outlook on life and my attitude (they say it’s clinically proven to help!).

3. Exercise I’ll actually do: I’ve always been a big fan of yoga, but I injured my wrists in a biking accident back in 2014 and haven’t been able to do yoga comfortably since. I still try to do it and just adapt yoga workouts to be more leg-centered than wrist, but I’d like to find some sort of workout that’s done standing up. Maybe T’ai Chi? If you have suggestions, I’m all ears! Oh, and here are the three YouTube channels I’ve tried so far and loved: (1) The Balanced Life with Robin Long, (2) Yoga with Adriene, (3) Kait Hurley.

4. Try daily meditation: My dad is actually the one who got me thinking about meditating. I think he does it most mornings, if not every morning, and he only has positive things to say about it. I’m intimidated by the idea of making meditation part of my routine this summer, but think it’s really important to try. I know I’ll fail a lot, but I’ve heard that failure is just part of your journey to accepting yourself and learning to quiet the mind to get to a better, healthier state. Have you tried it before? Do you use a guided meditation or just do it on your own?

5. Water, water, water: I need to drink more of it—enough said!

Healthy Habits I'm Adopting This Summer

Of course, now I want to hear from you, so please share any of your tips for living a healthier life in the comments below. I think, above all, I really just need to find balance. I pour incredible amounts of time and energy into designing our home and running my business, and the other half of my love goes right to John, our pets, and our families. While that’s all well and good and I think my heart’s in the right place, I need to shift some of that focus toward taking care of myself so I can do all of that with even more strength and energy.

Healthy Habits I'm Adopting This Summer

Healthy Habits I'm Adopting This Summer

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