Did I send plans for the twisty? I don't think so. Here goes: Cut out 1 each of pieces 1 through 8. These make the front end of the tube, taking it from the inner diameter to the outer diameter. Then cut out LOTS of #9 pieces. Hey, the Beatles old song, number 9, number 9....... Oh-oh, losing it here. Anyway, I use 180 pieces for a 30 ft tube. Sew all these pieces together, side by side, and you'll have this nice slanted, real long mess before too long. Then you sew good sides together, the point of #1 to the upper point of #9, in one LONG seam all the way to the end. But before you sew all the way to the end, you gotta make the end. Four ways to do this. 1. You can just sew all the way to the end, until you run out of material. Gives an offset point, as I recall. 2. You can repeat the 1 through 8 pieces alone, just like at the front and make a flat end. You can cut a circle and sew it in place. 3. Same a number 2 except you can use one of those small pointed patterns I sent (can't remember its number, but it's the one with seam allowances all around) and cut out 8 pieces and make a "beanie " cap and have a pointed end. 4. Or when you cut out the second set of pieces #1 through 8, after attaching the other little pointy pattern, the one that slips over the flat end of the #1 through 8, and you'll have a nice tapered tube end. I always sew some ribbon in the point, so I can attach another tube or tails. Then you cut out 8 of those pieces that look like a teacup with a hat, and sew them together to make the flowerhead. Attach that to the front end, and you got it. I've gone back and sewn in a small sleeve at the "V" notches of the flowerhead and inserted a thin flexible rod. It holds the mouth open and helps keep it inflated when winds are light. Didn't do it originally, but I tested one tube of a pair, and it definitely worked better. A little more design thinking. I wanted a three color tube with the colors offset one-third at each revolution. That meant nine pieces, three pieces each of the three colors. Therefore, eight around. I've also made a 6 color rainbow tube (on my page) so I used 2 pieces of each color, 12 total, and therefore, eleven pieces around. That meant I had to offset the side curves 1/11 of the length of the piece. Hope that is enough to get you going. Ask questions if not.