Wood Flower Wreath
Photo: Seth Smoot
Whether you prefer rustic or radiant, our ideas will brighten any home.
This easy-to-make wreath, made with tapioca wood flowers, works throughout the season's holidays and will last for years.
For a really fresh take on evergreen wreaths, make one from indoor ferns.
Go for the gold and enrich a simple cedar wreath with tiny bells, sprigs of golden cedar, and a matching satin bow.
Use a soft-touch ring to make a quick and beautiful Christmas wreath.
Add pepperberries to a vine wreath form for a decorative accent that spreads holiday cheer in or outdoors.
Get the look with a Martha Stewart Living Red Berry Wreath.
Made from sweet-smelling sprigs of golden cedar, this star-shaped wreath uses the same technique as the round form.
Fill your home with the sweet smell of bay laurel (or rosemary) with this easy-to-make wreath. And when the holidays are over, don't throw it away: Be sure to wash the wreath well right after you make it so you can remove the dried herbs from the wire frame later for use in cooking.
To carry on the cheerful tradition of holly-bedecked halls, add berry accents to a circle of silver fir. Because holly dries out quickly, it's best to display this wreath outside.
Enjoy the wonderfully familiar sounds of the holidays while keeping warm indoors. Hang this wreath where it will be heard (on a door, for instance), and bring the ring of sleigh bells to all the rooms in the house.
Hang a festive ring of mistletoe and inspire passion as well as good cheer.
The shiny green foliage of a boxwood wreath embellished with a quartet of slim satin bows captures the classic Christmas pairing of red and green. This window wreath could just as easily adorn a door or wall to make a festive statement.
An inviting wreath composed of cushion moss will thrive all year. Use some or all of the following natural materials to craft a beautiful wreath for your home.
This substantial wreath, made with long Norway spruce pinecones attached to a bed of moss, can last for years if stored properly:
Step aside, holly and mistletoe -- or at least make room for something new. The carnation is a surprisingly elegant and easygoing choice for holiday displays.
Golden beads become jewel-like decorations for a Christmas wreath. The beadwork flowers have wavy wire stems (they get their shape when the wire is wrapped around a spool).
This woodsy design is equally comfortable on an outside door or above a fireplace.
This wreath is the ideal complement to a tree filled with paper ornaments and is also lovely displayed on its own.
At this time of year, everything seems to gleam. Echo this holiday luster at home with decorations like this wreath bedecked with tinsel and glitter.
Unwrap a new wreath idea this year. Cover small containers, such as old jewelry boxes, with weatherproof paper, which will hold up outdoors, unlike wrapping paper; seal with all-weather tape. Add decorative bands in contrasting colors, if desired, and tie with ribbon. Attach to a flat wooden wreath form (ours is 18 inches) using a hot-glue gun. Affix a satin bow.
This is one of the easiest wreaths we've ever made. No fussing over symmetry or bending of boughs -- just some spray paint, a hot-glue gun, and floral wire.
Ring in the winter holidays with an impressive yet easy-to-make decoration for the front door that packs a beribboned triple punch.
Brighten your walls with a wreath made of golden-hued ribbons fashioned into poinsettias.
Create this glittering decoration by trimming a noble fir wreath with silvery ornaments and sprigs of seeded eucalyptus.
Make the entrance to your home inviting to holiday visitors -- including Santa -- with bright, merry lights; their sparkle highlights the shimmering globes and greenery of this double wreath.
Get the look with Martha Stewart Living Holiday Shatterproof Ornament Wreath at the Home Depot.
A delicate-looking wreath that creates the magical effect of candles flickering in the snow is easy to make and surprisingly sturdy.
This Scandinavian-style greenery "chandelier" is an eye-catching way to draw guests to a holiday cocktail or buffet table.
Adorn a wreath with strings of cranberries and popcorn -- colorful and edible materials that, if placed outdoors, will attract wildlife. To festoon a wreath with a garland, wrap the garland around a paddle and then wind it around the wreath; secure with florist's wire.
Padding a wire wreath with straw or hay creates a full, rounded base that can support a variety of materials. Leaves, dried flowers, or even clamshells can then be pinned or glued onto the soft form -- although a straw wreath is so beautiful, you may want to hang it on its own.
This shimmering wreath of faux gold leaves and branches makes a festive door display.
Festive red bells mimic the season's holly berries in this evergreen door wreath.
Decorate a wall or an interior door by hanging a holiday-card wreath.
Invite these friendly gingerbread characters to hang around for the holidays.
When suspended from the ceiling, this impressive, ornament-laden ring of greens will thrill your guests. Its wild, earthy look comes from the tangle of lichen branches and seeded eucalyptus, which are simply tucked into noble fir wreaths. The pomegranates below are brushed with edible luster dust, adding to the glow of the red-and-green tableau.
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