Sunday, December 19, 2010

Fresh Christmas Wreath

I've been making this kind of wreath on and off since high school (which seems like four score and seven years ago). On meaning when I'm feeling all fancy and crafty, off meaning when I'm feeling lazy and would rather hang up the fake wreath I got at an after Christmas sale forever ago. Usually I opt for the fake wreath. But not this year! This year I'm all fancy with my fresh wreath. That totally makes me a professional wreath-maker. When I feel like it. Bow down.

Because it's beautiful, simple, and really inexpensive. 

And whenever I make a fresh Christmas wreath, I feel all One With Nature without actually being in nature, so it's a win-win for me. Do you want to be One With Nature, too? All the cool kids are doing it.

What you will need:

Christmas tree branches (I just grab some trimmings from the store's pile when I buy my Christmas tree)
Scissors (kitchen shears work well)
Wire hanger
Twist ties (the ones from the grocery produce section work well because they're green)
Glue gun 
Ribbon 
Small ball ornaments (the cheaper the better! WhooYah!)


Prep:

It's a good idea to cover your work surface because those tree needles are going to be everywhere. I use a really fancy specialty work surface protector otherwise known as the $0.50 on sale plastic party tablecloth left over from one of my kid's birthday parties. Because I'm glamorous like that.



Cut the branches into reasonable pieces. You want flimsy little stalks that you can bend. Try to get the ones with lots of green.


You'll need a bunch.


Grab your hanger and tear off all the paper nonsense.


Curve the top part into a little circle hook and the bottom into a large circle.


Turn the hook inside the circle. You can use that part to hang your wreath later. Or you can cut it off if it gets in your way. The large wire circle will make it easy enough to hang the wreath, so it's up to you. I only cut that loopy part if it still shows when I'm done with my wreath. The wire is sharp after you cut it, so you probably want to wait until you're finished with your wreath to decide.


Make it!

Start wrapping and twisting your branches around the wire circle form.


If you're careful, the branches will stay in place pretty much all by themselves, but a little support never hurt anybody. That's where the twist ties come in handy.


Here's a back view:


As you add new branches, you'll just tuck them into a previous branch and twist them around your circle form. Keep going until you have a nice, full shape. If you have any uncontrollable branch pieces that stick out, and they're driving you crazy, just cut them off. I like mine a little bit on the wild side, but you are totally the boss of your own wreath. You're not any more of a hero if you have to trim it. Sometimes it just makes me happy to cut off the sticky-out pieces.

What's that wreath? You got something to say? Take that! (Cut.) And that! (Cut.) I'm totally the boss of you, wreath! (Cut.)

It's cathartic.

And so is using that big word just now.
But maybe not the fact that I consider cathartic a big word. That might just be sad.

It doesn't matter, because I'm the boss of my wreath.


Anyway!

Glue gun on your ball ornaments.

Make a ribbon bow and glue gun that sucker on, too.

Beautiful and DONE!


Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

Pretend-Professional Fresh Wreath-Maker, Out!

6 comments:

Ali Richardson said...

PRETTY!!!! I'll take a baker's dozen of 'em. Just tell me when you're done making them and I'll swing by and pick them up, k? Oh, and add some turquoise in mine to tie it in with my coffee table. Smooches!

Anonymous said...

Honey you rock ! It smells soooo good I do not want it outside...
Yeah, that's right that's my wife......This Wreath says to all "Take that terrorists its Christmas at our house....We are not afraid of you" ;)

4kidsgrandma said...

Thank you for these easy-to-follow directions, especially appreciated by craft-challenged persons! I will print and keep.

Ronal dino said...

The vegetation types used in a Christmas wreath are as diverse as their own crown. In Christmasfarms.com, a wide range of wreaths that are: balsam fir, douglas fir, Pepperberry boxwood, juniper, cedar, white pine, magnolia and many more!

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