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    Home » craft tutorial

    How to Make a Three Color Ribbon Lei

    Published: Apr 14, 2016 · Modified: Nov 15, 2019

    589 shares
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    My husband is now on shore tour (yay!), but when his boat got home from deployment last fall members of the FRG made ribbon lei in the boat's color for every single sailor. Wow! Even though they're fairly quick to make, that was a time commitment.

    Ribbon lei like this are great for situations where you need a lot of lei, need them to last, and don't want to risk staining someone's dress uniform/clothes/gown/etc (I've heard ti leaves stain dress whites - eek!). I used a narrow picot ribbon for my accent pieces (picot is the ribbon with little loops on the outside, in case you aren't familiar), but you can use a narrow plain satin ribbon, instead.

    How to Make a Tricolor Braided Ribbon Lei

    This post may include affiliate links, which means I may make a commission on purchases made through these links at no additional cost to you. 

    Materials needed to make a tricolor braided ribbon lei:

    • 12 yards of a ⅜" wide plain satin ribbon, cut into two 6 yard pieces (you can go a little longer, if you'd like, and just trim the extra at the end)
    • 12 yards of 3/16" or ¼" picot or plain satin ribbon, either two 6 yard pieces of two different colors or two pieces of the same color

    You may also want small binder clips, paper clips, or quilting Wonder Clips to hold the ribbon in a loose coil.

    ribon for braided ribbon lei

    Pair up your plain ribbon and picot. You'll be braiding with the picot lying along the "shiny"/"smooth" side of the satin ribbon, like this:

    place tricot on top of plain ribbon

    Take one set of ribbons and loop them into a slip knot. Leave a tail that's at least 1 foot long so you can tie the lei into a loop once you're finished braiding! You want the picot to be on the satin ribbon's smooth side on the working end of your ribbons (the end leading to 5-6 yards of ribbon you'll be braiding with). In the pictured example, this is the set of ribbons with the blue picot and is referred to at Set 1.

    tie a slip knot

    Place the second piece of picot along the smooth side of the second piece of satin ribbon, move about a foot away from one end, and simply fold the ribbons over to form a loop. This is with white picot in the example and is referred to as Set 2. Insert this loop through the slip knot in Set 1, as shown.

    form a loop

    Using the working end of ribbon Set 1, form a loop, making sure the picot is on the outside, and insert it through the loop in Set 2.

    second loop_

    Pull on the ribbons in Set 2 to close the loop, as shown. You want the ribbon loops to be snug, but not so tight they cause puckering.

    tighten the ribbons

    Now you have a little loop like a rabbit ear made from the ribbons in Set 1 sticking up, so you just repeat the process outlined above! Make a loop with the ribbons in Set 2 and insert it through the loop in Set 1. Snug the Set 1 ribbons down.

    braiding the ribbon lei

    That is all there is to it! Just keep making loops and snugging them down.

    braiding the tricolor ribbon lei
    braiding the tricolor ribbon lei-2

    Keep going until the lei is about 3 feet long and/or you have about a foot of ribbon left. To bind off the end, pull the tail of the ribbons all the way through on the very last loop.

    Before tying the ribbons together to form a loop, decide which side you'd like facing out. You can either have the side you've been looking at while making your loops:

    braided ribbon lei

    Or the "back" side:

    tricolor braided ribbon lei

    I think this side is prettier when making a tricolor ribbon lei, but the choice is yours!

    Once you've picked a side, tie all four tail ends together to form a closed loop. I like to tie a square knot then a simple bow. You can also make a separate, more elaborate bow and tie it in place.

    tie a square knot

    And there you have it! A simple, but pretty tricolor braided ribbon lei.

    braided ribbon lei

    If you'd like to see the process in motion, I have a quick YouTube clip that shows how to form and tighten the loops. The demonstration is with two pieces of ribbon, but the process is exactly the same.

    Remember to Pin this post!

    Remember to Pin this three color ribbon lei tutorial so you don't lose track of it!

    How to Make a Three Color Ribbon Lei

    Sort of unrelated - I think one of the neatest ways I've seen an 'artificial' lei used was by a lady who lived near me in Virginia. She was Hawaiian and she'd wear a lei either over her shoulders or in her hair every single day when she walked her dog. It helped remind her of home while she was living so far away and I loved seeing her when I was out with my dogs. {More Related Posts

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    Comments

    1. Paige

      April 15, 2016 at 3:37 am

      I like the back side more, too! Haha.

      As for the prompt in the video, I'm thankful for my morning routine, too. We're a one-car family so I start the day by dropping my husband off at the train station. Then I cook myself some eggs while my coffee brews, and eat while I ease into the workday with some emails. It's just a pleasant way to start the day. 🙂

      Reply
      • Natashalh

        April 15, 2016 at 7:32 am

        Ooo, train station! How nice. =) I'm very familiar with the one car routine! Glad to know I'm not the only person who enjoys doing the same thing every morning.

        Reply
    2. BeadedTail

      April 14, 2016 at 9:15 am

      That's such a pretty lei! I'll need to make a ribbon lei for my hula class! My hula teacher (I can't remember the Hawaiian name for that) was teaching us the Hawaiian alphabet and words too and she always used lei as an example of how we Americanize things. There is no S in the Hawaiian language so that means the plural of lei is lei - not our American leis. We made her cringe a lot in the way we said things!

      Reply
      • Natashalh

        April 14, 2016 at 12:03 pm

        I still think it's really neat you take hula! I also think active efforts to help the Hawaiian language are fantastic. I know several people with children who've learned Hawaiian in school, even though they, themselves, don't speak Hawaiian. I love that similar movements have been taking place around the world (like with various dialects of Gaelic). It's great we're beginning to recognize the importance of culture and diversity. Any kids we have will definitely be raised bilingual and will be taught to be proud of their Latin heritage.

        Reply
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