Use a ruler to measure out a 7 by 7-inch (17.5 by 17.5-cm) square on a piece of paper or just use tinfoil. So I think with tinfoil you don't need to paste a different color on some cut out paper.
Draw along the ruler with a pencil. Once you have drawn the square, cut
it out with scissors. Because you'll be folding and coloring over it,
you can use any old piece of scrap paper.
Color in the squares, yet with tinfoil you don't have to do this. Make each square a different
color. You can get as creative as you like with each square. Here are
some ideas for different ways to color the squares:
Trace four diagonal lines from the corners of the square toward the center.
Place a ruler diagonally from one corner of the square so that it runs
through the center and touches the opposite corner. Draw a line from the
edge of the corner to just 3 centimeter (1.2 in) away from the
center. Repeat this for each of the corners so that you have four lines
drawn toward the middle and they are all of the same length.
Cut along each diagonal line. Don't cut
farther than the lines you've traced. Leave 3 centimeter (1.2 in)
of uncut space in the center and along each line. Don't cut the four
straight lines you drew to separate the colored boxes.
Push a push-pin into the middle of the edges A, B, C and D.
Scoot your finger slightly to the side, then push the pin right through
the paper so that each one of the edges sits snugly on top of the other
beneath the pin.
Remove the push-pin and hold the edges down with your finger again.
Place a map pin in the hole that has been formed by the push-pin. A map
pin is a short pin with a colorful ball on the end. The map pin's
circumference will be slightly smaller than the hole made by the
push-pin. This allows the pinwheel to spin.
Wet the end of a stick and lay it down on a flat surface.
Dowels (solid wooden rods) and wooden skewers work well as pinwheel
sticks- just make sure to cut the pointy end off. Wet the end of the
stick so that the wood does not splinter when you put the pin into it.
Don't try to hold the stick as you could drive the pin into your finger.
Hammer with care.
If the pin is not going into the stick easily, very gently tap the head
of the pin with a hammer. Drive the pin into the stick securely. If
necessary, fold back any part of the pin that sticks through the other
side of the stick. Do this by gently tapping the point of the needle
downwards with the hammer so that it lies flat against the stick.