Saturday Studio: Cut Paper Pop-up

Kelsey Herber, School Programs Associate

This week in the studio we are diving into the work of Kirsty Mitchell as seen in her exhibition, The Spellbound Spirit: Photographs by Kirsty Mitchell, on display at FWMoA now until April 26. More specifically, weโ€™re looking into Mitchellโ€™s thought process provided by the artist herself in her thorough blog posts found on her website: www.kirstymitchell.art/wonderland/.ย 

A night scene with a woman standing at the base of a tree. The tree has nine large cut outs of white paper ships hanging from the branches like ornaments. Each ship is backlit with a white light that also illuminates the tree. The woman standing under the tree is looking upwards, lifting her arms, and bending her elbows with her hands near her head.
Kirsty Mitchell, British, b. 1973. The Faraway Tree, archival pigment print, 2011. Purchase with funds provided by the June E. Enoch Collection Fund, 2022.442. Image courtesy of FWMoA.

Mitchell cites cut-paper artists such as Elsa Mora and even fairytale writer Hans Christian Andersen, as well as pop-up storybooks, as inspiration for the intricate designs found within her floral photographs. With a skilled hand, paper can be sliced, folded, and reworked in complex and elaborate methods that evoke patterns and details seen in nature; Mitchell combines these styles together in her storytelling photographs.

A yellow page with grey/purple cut outs placed on top. The cut outs look like shadows reflecting each other. The top half of the image is reminiscent of ballet dancers, and the bottom half looks like men balancing on swans.
Hans Christian Andersen, Danish, 1805-1875. Two Pierrots Balancing on Swans and Two Dancers, cutout in blue paper mounted on an album sheet, 1820-1875. Image courtesy of The Met.
A stack of art materials: A brown Bristol board, pink, green, purple, and blue paper, scissors, an exacto knife, a pencil, and a glue stick.

In the spirit of paper cutting and Mitchellโ€™s beautiful photographs full of lush nature, just in time for spring, weโ€™re going to make our own cut-paper pop-up card!ย 

Materials:

  • Paper
  • Scissors
  • Glue stick

Optional materials:

  • Pencil
  • X-Acto knife
  • Cutting surface
A folded blue piece of paper, held by a white hand. The center of the page has been creased in half, and the center of the fold has been cut perpendicular to the center crease.

Choose one piece of paper to be the card itself. Fold it in half hamburger style, then cut two notches about an inch apart, along the fold. The strip that youโ€™ve just cut in the center of the paper can now be folded inward so it bends the opposite way as the rest of the paperโ€™s crease.

A green background with lighter green stems, and purple and pink flowers being placed by a white hand in the shape of a bouquet. The flowers are like cartoons, with half appearing like tulips.

Since Kirsty Mitchellโ€™s artworks are mostly centered around floral nature designs, I stuck with a flowery pop-up image. Using white or colorful paper, draw your desired design and cut it out. I used four different colors for my pop-up image.

The final product with the blue page open to reveal a bouquet of pink and purple flowers above a light green stem.

Once your image is cut out, glue it to the horizontal plane of the tab you cut into the card base. This will allow the image to move as the card is opened and closed. You can practice with bigger tabs, multiple tabs, and varying imagery!


For more inspiration, see The Spellbound Spirit: Photographs by Kirsty Mitchell, on display at the FWMoA now until April 26, 2026.

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