Digitprop – Paper design

Rotating image valentine card

This is a valentine card with a special trick – when you rotate the image, it changes. I found this very cool idea and concept on the Extreme Cards and Papercrafting blog, and more specifically on this page – a very nice blog with a wealth of unusual, eye-catching and beautiful papercraft projects. Here is what it is:

Looks like a regular greeting card, right? Now, when you pull the left-hand handle and rotate the image, this is what happens:

The smiley is replaced by a heart. Add some personal text and you have the nicest valentine card. Here is a video that shows the effect:

Should anybody wonder, the pixelation is deliberate – I like the old-school 8-bit look of the smiley and heart icon.

Now, how do you make one of these? Well, first of all, print and cut out the following two-page template:

You will get three smaller pieces and the card itself:

(The pencil is supposed to highlight the fact that the card itself also has an internal cut. This will be difficult to make with scissors, and I rather suggest a Xacto knife or similar tool)

Now, you have to align one of the ‘heart’ pieces with the card itself, like so:

The heart piece goes behind the smiley part, and they should be aligned so that the vertical cut ends for both at the same position. This also means their left semicircle edge will align:

Next, take the other two parts and align them in a similar way to each other:

Next, keep each of the two pairs firmly together and slight one pair into the other, so that they interlock and meet at the vertical incision:

This is a bit difficult, and you have to be sure that everything is perfectly aligned. In the end, the two top parts should form a complete smiley face:

Almost done. Now glue the bottom flap to the card. As you can see, it extends below the card, but that will be corrected by cutting the piece off where it sticks out. Glue the two left-hand flaps together, but not to the card. Make sure that the parts can rotate freely while the glue is drying. The pieces interlock and hold each other securely in place. The glue makes sure that the two rotating parts move in sync, and that they cannot move too far – otherwise, they would fall out of the card.

Here is the card after trimming the bottom flap:

All that’s left to do is to fold the card at the center line and to come up with some witty / romantic / cool text to go inside the card.

Again, kudos to Extreme Cards and Papercrafting for the idea and concept.