Let’s carefully look at the diagram and understand what it’s asking.
This is a string art pattern — you make pictures by connecting dots with straight lines. The numbers (like 1, 2, 3, etc.) tell you the order to connect the dots. You start at dot #1, then go to dot #2, then #3, and so on, following the arrows.
Looking at the flower part:
- There are many small “petal” shapes around the center.
- Each petal has its own set of numbered dots and arrows showing the path.
- The center also has a spiral made by connecting dots in order.
Looking at the leaves:
- Each leaf is made by drawing lines from one side to the other, following the numbers.
- For example, in the bottom-right leaf, you start at dot #1, then go to #2, then #3, then #4 — each time drawing a line to the next number.
The key idea:
Follow the numbers in order to draw the lines. That’s how you create the picture.
There’s no math calculation here — it’s about following instructions step by step.
So if someone asks, “How do I complete this string art?” — the answer is:
Start at the lowest number (usually 1), draw a line to the next number (2), then to 3, then 4, and keep going until you’ve connected all the dots in order. Do this for each section (center, petals, leaves) separately.
You don’t need to guess — just follow the numbers and arrows.
Final Answer:
Follow the numbers in order (1 → 2 → 3 → ...) and draw straight lines between them as shown by the arrows to complete the string art design.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable string art owl pattern.