Make a second set for the bottom section following the same pattern and place to one side
for now.
Take the first section, your headpin, your 4mm or 6mm spare bead, and your larger decorative bead. You’ll need pliers for this.
Pass the headpin through the smaller bead then pass it through the centre of the smallest square from the INSIDE.
Place your larger decorative bead on the headpin, then bend the headpin from 1-2mm above the bead to 45 degrees. Take your
chain nose pliers and holding the pin as close to the bend as possible, wrap the wire around and under to form a loop. Carefully
wrap the remaining wire around the stem between the loop and the bead. You may need to trim off any excess. Make sure there
are no sharp edges, you can file those with a fine file, or pinch the end under.
Photos below show the method of wire-wrapping the loop and does not show the bead inside your project.
Now you are ready to assemble the ornament. Take your
top section and zip join to all four sides.
Take the bottom section and join to the lower sides in
the same way.
Finally to finish, just attach a new thread (if using
Fireline, change to a softer thread, such as OneG or K.O.)
to the smallest square, weave in to exit the middle bead
of the group of 3A added in a corner of round 3.
You will add fringe (dangles) to each of the corners in
the same way. Exiting the corner A, thread all the beads
you need for your fringe, ending with a drop bead and
3 seed beads. Skip the three seed beads and pass back
up all the remaining beads, and back through the A in
the corner. Make sure the thread is pulled through all
the beads evenly and there are no gaps or loops
showing. Weave around to the next corner bead to make
the next fringe.
Repeat on all four corner beads, weave in the end, fasten
off securely and trim.
The pattern you use for the fringe is entirely up to you.
Here are the sequences I used for reference.