If your home is for sale, a holiday wreath is one terrific
way to boost your curb appeal. In fact, a
wreath on the front door is pretty much a necessity if you want to get buyers curious about what's behind "door number one."
Make your own evergreen wreath, and you’ll save money, create one that’s unique, and have some fun.
What’s the secret to turning out a beautiful wreath that
doesn't look homemade? Actually, there are three secrets.
One: Fullness Matters
A novice makes a skimpy wreath. A professional makes a lush
one. A full base of greenery is more important than what decorates it. If you
aren’t able to gather or purchase all the greenery, you can buy a plain evergreen
wreath as a start.
Two: Embellishments Count
For a professional-looking wreath, choose striking
ornaments. Choose ones with color or shine, ones that tell a story or make
people smile, ones that might even be…how can I say this…gaudy. They need to be dramatic to stand
out. No wallflowers if you want some noticeable curb appeal.
Three: The Focal Point's the Thing
A wreath isn’t finished until it has a singular statement
piece. It’s usually the bow, but it can also be a super-sized ornament like a doll
or other figurine like a feathery angel or a sparkly snowman. It could be an
over-the-top silk flower arrangement, a printed banner, or a vintage toy. Without
the focal point, the greenery wreath is nothing special.
When your home is for sale, your wreath can be part of your
selling team. Have it emphasize what’s unique to your home. It might capitalize
on what’s special about your town or your part of the country. It might reflect
the carefully chosen color scheme you’ve decorated your exterior or interior
with. It might mimic the style of your home, such as classy traditional, hip
mid century modern, charming cottage, or edgy urban.
Start with the Base
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| Your wreath makings can be simple or an assortment. Just make sure there's enough to pack it tight. If your wreath will be seen from both sides, you'll need enough to make it round. |
My favorite wreath form is the straw wreath. Besides being
the most economical (Have you seen the prices of foam wreaths lately?), it’s
easy to work with, versatile, and sturdy – a great start for creating
the full look. I wrapped the entire wreath form in florist’s
tape because I didn't want any straw showing.
Did you know that as you apply florists tape, you need to
stretch it to about twice it length? Stretching activates the wax that makes it
sticky. Just stretch as you go, and place where you want it.
Whether you have a collection of various greens or a stash
of one variety, get it all together and discard or trim damaged foliage. If you
plan to use your wreath indoors, you can prolong its life by soaking the
foliage stems in water overnight after
cutting them.
Ideally, you’ll have free or low cost sources for the base
of the wreath, possibly trimmings from your yard or from a fresh Christmas tree
you buy. Along with traditional coniferous greenery like juniper, pine, and false
cypress (hemlock and spruce will shed), I like to mix in shrubbery and broadleaved
evergreens like boxwood, mountain laurel, pittosporum, nandina, English ivy,
holly, magnolia leaves, eucalyptus, or whatever else I can collect.
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| The first cluster gets wired on. I used 26 gauge wire. Alternate your clusters of greenery so that the entire form is covered, including the sides. |
Use medium gauge wire or heavy twine to attach greens to the
wreath form. To start, wrap it once around the wreath and secure it. Then, cluster a
handful of greens, lay it on the wreath with one hand, and wrap the wire over
the stems and around the wreath two to three times with the other hand.
Continue all around the wreath form, staggering the clusters
of green so that one cluster hides the stems of the previous cluster. I prefer
using wire because it’s easier to keep it tight, and that’s important as you
continue around the wreath form. When you’ve come full circle, twist the wire or tie the twine, and make a loop for hanging.
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| Make a wire or twine loop at the top of your wreath. If you are unsure of where you want the top, you can save this step for later, but it's easier to add it earlier than later. |
If the greens look crooked or untidy, you can trim stray
greenery with scissors or pruners. A common mistake beginners make is to have a
shaggy wreath, but I like a bit of that loose look.
Pick in Your Ornaments
Ornamentation is either wired on, picked in, or glued onto a
wreath. When the wreath base is made of wire, you’ll need to wire the ornaments
onto it. On a foam or straw base, you’ll either glue on or pick in the
ornaments. Picking lets you put ornaments exactly where you want them so they
will stay there until you take them off. Glued ornaments aren’t easily
removable.
If you’re on a budget, use thrifted, recycled or natural
items for ornaments. After-Christmas sales are an ideal time to score on some
wreath-making ornaments for next December. If free, natural objects like nuts,
shells, seed heads, twigs, and pinecones look too ordinary, give them a hit of
silver or gold spray paint.
Here’s how to make a pick, the way a floral designer showed
me, the “load and lock” way.
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| This is how a pick should be fastened to make it wiggle-free, with a wire that loops back between the stem and the pick. |
Picks come in different sizes. Lay the pick large enough to
accommodate your cluster next to the stems.
Make one turn around the stems with the wire that’s attached to the
pick. Then, make a figure eight of the wire between the stems and the pick.
Keep the wire tight, and continue to wrap it around the stems and the pick.
This figure eight locks the cluster so it stays in place instead of swiveling
or going nutsy on you when you add it to the wreath.
Add the Star of the Show
Craft stores and craft departments are full of items to put that
all-important exclamation point on your wreath. If there is one place I’ll splurge
a little, it’s on the one statement ornament. But you'd be surprised how some spray
glitter or spray snow on a thrift store find can deliver glam results!
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| Rather than a bow, I chose an ornament from my stash to be the centerpiece of this wreath. The pewter bells on a silk cord are designed to announce visitors arriving! |
If a multiple-loop bow is your focal point, I have five tips
for making it a winner: Use wired ribbon, don’t skimp the number of loops (10
on each side of the center is about right), use florists wire to tie the
center, keep it tight in the center, and fluff it up!
If you want a more romantic bow, here is a tutorial from
Diane at In My Own Style.
If you want a simple, tied bow that stays straight instead
of going all crooked on you, Kristi at Addicted 2 Decorating can show you how.
Some of my tips for wreath making don’t apply to novelty
wreaths. If you’re crafting a wreath of felt flowers or buttons or pine cones,
you may not need a focal point.
If you’re building on a wire or foam wreath, you might tie
ornaments on with lengths of florist wire or chenille ties instead of wooden
picks.
If you’re making a wreath of coffee filters or rags or
feathers or driftwood, the wreath itself is the statement and whatever you add
to it depends on personal style.
But if you’re turning out a wintry evergreen wreath, my tips
will help you make it look polished and complete.
Whether your Open House is to lure buyers for your home on
the market, or to share holiday cookies with your neighbors, or host your
annual New Years Day bash, a wreath on the front door welcomes in style whoever
knocks on your door. If you make it yourself, you can make it special.
And to help you lure those buyers, download my $5 ebook, DIY Home Staging Tips to Sell Your Home Fast and for Top Dollar, for tips and tricks the pros use to stage homes that sell.














6 comments:
So many super tips in this post! I didn't know how to make my own floral pick. I always buy ones, so this will save me some money because I love to make wreaths!
I used to make wreaths. This has got me itching to make one for Christmas. Let's see, I have most of those materials...and greenery galore here in the woods. Great tutorial.
Exactly.
Dinky is Stinky.
Garden & Be Well, XO T
I don't have a blog, so I can't brag about my wreath, but I did make one, my first ever, and I used the pointers you wrote about here and I'm loving it! I never thought about the base being real full. I was able to use a neighbor's bushes for clippings and I purchased ready-made floral picks. Is that cheating? LOL.
Like another reader said, this post was full of great tips and pointers. I didn't know that you had to stretch floral tape to make it sticky! Love how that wreath turned out. Very pretty!
Bows are my bug-a-boo, so I was glad you gave some pointers and links. I checked them all out and learned some surprising bow-making tricks. Where would we be without blogs educating us? Thanks. XOXOXOXO
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