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Don’t Throw Away That Packing Paper!

After last winter, as I was taking down our front door’s wreath, I looked at the wire wreath frame and thought, “I’m sure I can use this for something.” So I kept it. Fast forward to a week ago when I was watching a video of a woman using packing paper to design a basket, and I had my “Ah-ha!” moment. Could I braid packing paper and make a wreath out of it?

This turned out to be very easy, a little sticky (because I over-glue everything), in the end really pretty, and basically free!!

BEFORE: Scrap wreath form and packing paper.

Supplies:

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  • Long strips of packing paper
  • Hot glue and glue gun (I used 5 glue sticks)
  • Wreath form
  • Decorative ribbons, fake plants, flowers, etc.

Step 1: Cut strips of packing paper. My husband and I are always amused by how Amazon, Bed Bath and Beyond, etc. overpack our orders with way more packing paper and way bigger boxes than seem necessary. We are pretty good about recycling, but I happened to have a large amount of this packing paper in our garage, so I grabbed the 2 longest pieces and brought them inside.

First, I flattened them out on the floor. Then, I folded them lengthwise in thirds. This made it easier to cut even strips, using scissors to cut down each fold. This left me with 3 equally long pieces.

Making 3 strips.

Now that I had my pieces, I squeezed each one back to being scrunched, more like paper rope.

Squeezing paper ropes.

Side note: About the length of your paper… The longer the better, but you could use shorter pieces too if that’s all you have. You’ll just end up tucking them in and glueing more often.

Step 2: Braid the paper “ropes.” I channeled my inner middle schooler and did this like I used to make friendship bracelets. I took each of the 3 ends and taped them to my counter, then began to braid the paper. I was worried that it might rip if I pulled my braid too tight, but it didn’t at all. I had to keep making sure the long ends weren’t getting too twisted up as I went, but that was easy enough.

Braiding.

When I was done, I took my hot glue gun and glued the braid together at the ends. For one end, I really mashed it up and made it as narrow as I could. This would be the end I would tuck into my wreath form to start. For the other end, I tried to make it a little more decorative, kind of like a bow, but I ended up not using that, so don’t worry about it. Just make sure you glue both ends to hold the braid together.

Step 3: Wrap the wreath form. Taking that narrow end, I shoved it between the prong-things and was glad to find that it held pretty well. You may need a string or something to hold it in place, or even glue it. Next, gently pressing the braid around the wreath form, I stretched it carefully all the way around. This part should be the sides of the wreath, not lying flat on top but rather around the sides.

Once I had the braid back where I started, I cut the braid there. Then I used my hot glue gun to hold the cut end in place, blending it into the existing braid where it met the other end.

Cutting the right length.

I then took my second braid (created the same way as what I described before) and tucked the one end near the start of my first attached braid. I kind of wish I’d spaced these differently so I didn’t have an obvious narrower area, but it didn’t end up being too noticeable. Wherever you start your second braid, this is the one you’ll use to wrap around the topside of the wreath, facing up as you work. I again gently pressed the braid around the wreath form, only on top this time. Once I got all the way around, I again cut the end and glued it to blend into the start.

Tucking in the second braid.

There was a gap between the first braid and the second that sat on top of it. This was fixed easily enough by going around with my glue gun and pressing the two braids together.

Gap needing to be glued together.

For my third, inner braid, I used the leftovers from my first braid. Taking the one end, I glued it against the other braids and then pressed the braid in place all the way around the inside of the wreath. Where it ended, I again glued. Then I quickly went around and glued this inner braid to the others where any gaps showed.

Again, how many strips/braids you use depends on the length of your paper. But basically, however many pieces of braids it takes, do an outside layer, a top layer, and an inner layer. OR, you could wrap the braid around the wreath form again and again as you go around – I bet that would look great too, though it would probably take a bit more paper. For my wreath, I like how it looks like a couple of connected braid rings.

3 braid layers on. (With a narrow spot)

Step 4: Decorate. Like I said, I had a narrow spot because of where I attached all the ends. But, since I wanted to add some decorations to my wreath, I knew my decorations could make this spot less noticeable. You could leave your wreath plain, because the braid itself is pretty. Or you could add ribbons, a big bow, fake birds – whatever!

I took a little strip of burlap and tied that on. Then, after hanging the wreath so I could see how I wanted it, I stuck little plastic plants into the braid.

Adding plant decorations.

I really like how this turned out. It’s thick because of the 3 layers of braids, and I can change the decorations depending on the season or holiday.

AFTER: Braided wreath!


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Fake Pumpkins for Fall

This idea was inspired by 2 different things I saw on Pinterest. Apparently I’m late to the game – there are a ton of people who knew you could make fake pumpkins out of grocery bags! I wasn’t exactly going for real-looking pumpkins with mine, so I used the basic instructions I found combined with another idea for how to decorate them. And, my kids helped, so this was a fun way to make decorations for Fall that we all can take some credit for. Best of all – it cost me practically nothing!

BEFORE: Piles of grocery bags.

Supplies:

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  • plastic grocery bags
  • painters tape
  • twine and/or clear line
  • joint compound or glue
  • sturdy paper towel
  • acrylic paints
  • petals, tissue paper, leaves – whatever you want to decorate with!
  • hot glue and gun

Step 1: Stuff and bundle grocery bags. We have an embarrassing pile of plastic grocery bags in our garage, waiting to be taken for recycling. Now for this project, I was glad we had them! Taking one bag, I fluffed up a bunch of others and stuffed them inside. For 3 of my pumpkins, I also added an empty, cleaned gallon jug to fill some space. You could add newspaper too, or packing paper – whatever will fill the main bag and still let it be squishy around the sides.

Once I had a bag full and generally sphere-like, I tied the top handles together so this could become the stem layer.

Tied stem.

Step 2: Wrap to make dividing grooves and stems. I tried to make pumpkin grooves a few different ways.

For one pumpkin, I used painters tape. Starting at the top “stem” (which I wrapped in tape to create), I put on a long strip of tape and held it tightly near the stem, then ran it down and around the bottom of the bag. I did this a few more times around to make dividing sections around the bag. This worked okay but didn’t make as obvious grooves as other methods.

Tape grooves.

For another pumpkin, I used twine to make the grooves. I tied it around the stem, then wrapped it down and around the bottom of the bag, spacing it a bit and wrapping it around and around until I had a bunch of denting divides. This was my favorite look and worked the best, in my option. When I was happy with it, I tied off the twine at the stem again.

Twine grooves.

Unfortunately, I ran out of twine, so next I tried fine, clear fishing line for the last 2 pumpkins. This worked okay but slipped around a lot more than the twine had done. It was also harder to tie off and keep tight. But, it worked pretty well to make a lot of deep grooves.

Line grooves.

As I’d done for the first pumpkin, I used painters tape to make the other pumpkins’ stems. Holding up the tied handles, I wrapped the tape around the handles to make a stiff, single stem. You can bend these a little bit to give the stems different shapes sticking out the top of your pumpkins.

Pumpkins formed and ready.

Step 3: Paper mache the pumpkins. I’ve seen a lot of paper mache recipes that use flour, but that seemed kinda gross to me and I didn’t want a mess. 🤷‍♀️ Instead, I took about a spoonful of joint compound and stirred it around to dissolve in a bowl of water. If you don’t have joint compound, you could use glue – just be use you get the mixture right so that it sticks and hardens when dry.

You also normally use paper/newspaper, but I used sturdy paper towel. This worked really well because it was pliable and also had a nice texture. Be sure to use a good, thick paper towel so it doesn’t fall apart when wet, though.

Strips ready.

After ripping the paper towel into smaller strips, I dipped each strip in the bowl’s mixture, let it drip off against the side of the bowl, and then stuck it on the pumpkin/grocery bag. I made sure to push the paper towel down into the dividing groves around the pumpkin to keep that shape.

Adding the strips.

It worked really well to set the grocery bag on a whole paper towel to catch the excess water – once this was wet enough, I flipped the pumpkin and used that paper towel to covered the bottom side of the bag. I then added a layer of paper towel strips around the edges of that bottom piece to help it stay on and also blend the edges.

Spreading the bottom piece.

Once I had the whole bag covered, I added a few strips over places where some edges didn’t stay flat. A good trick was to make sure all sides of my strips were ripped so that the wet edges really blended in. This looked better than leaving the paper towel strips with straight, blunt edges.

Step 4: Dry and paint stems. I set my pumpkins in the sun to help them dry, but mine still took overnight to completely dry and harden. The joint compound on the paper towels makes them just stiff enough to hold the pumpkin solid so that you can work with a harder surface for the following steps.

Drying.

Step 5: Paint the pumpkins. Because you’re painting paper towel, little acrylic paints work just fine. One pumpkin I wanted to have a white base, so that one was easy to paint white, barely brighter than the dried paper towel was naturally anyway.

Another pumpkin I painted with a “realistic” orange , then added some brown touches in the groves.

Painting the orange pumpkin.

The remaining 2 pumpkins were claimed by my daughters…and I let them go nuts since I planned to mostly cover these anyway. 😁 They had fun, and the reds and yellows in particular added a cool touch to the end result.

Also, to finish the stems, I took a dark brown paint and painted each stem, covering the blue painters tape.

Girls painting with me.

You don’t have to paint the pumpkins if you’re going to cover them, but I thought it was a good idea to do so in case anything showed through in the end. (I also considered painting a pumpkin in a light brown, since the paper towel looked a lot like burlap – so that’s another option if you’d like to try it for me and see how it looks! lol)

Step 6: Cover the pumpkins in…

For my white pumpkin, I took an enormous, dried hydrangea that I’d spray painted with a rose gold paint last Fall. Pulling off a bunch of individual petals, I glued them on one at a time all over the pumpkin. I even took a few of the dried leaves from the hydrangea and added those around the stem. This option took a lot of time, but it looks really pretty!

LOTS of petals.

For my “realistic” orange pumpkin, I took a lovely tissue paper and cut it up into strips that I then glued onto the pumpkin. Yes, I covered the whole thing, but I’m glad I painted the pumpkin because you can slightly see through the tissue, and this way the pumpkin looks like the real thing. Once I had all the tissue paper on, I added a little strip of burlap tied around the stem for an added decorative touch.

Adding strips of tissue paper.

For my girls’ pumpkins, we headed outside and collected a whole bunch of fallen leaves. This was quite fun. We brought them inside and set them on paper towels to dry, and I placed a paper towel over them along with plates on top to keep them flat.

Taking the biggest leaves first, I spread a little hot glue around the edges and then pressed them onto the pumpkins, pushing them especially into the groves to keep the pumpkin shape as much as I could. I put mostly green leaves down first, then added the prettiest orange and red leaves on top, layering them like a collage.

Adding leaves.

Fun fact: if you spread hot glue on wet, green leaves, they make a smell like cooked spinach. 🤣🤣🤣 I learned after a while to turn the glue gun off if it got too hot, and it was much less painful on my hands to press the leaves on if the glue wasn’t so hot.

Because I didn’t want all their painting efforts to be lost, I left a few gaps where the red or yellow or even blue paint could show through. Much to my surprise, these leaf-covered pumpkins ended up being my favorite.

All finished, here were the end results:

AFTER: Petals pumpkin.
AFTER: Tissue pumpkin.
AFTER: Leaf pumpkin 1.
AFTER: Leaf pumpkin 2.

There are a LOT of ways you could decorate these fake pumpkins. Let me know what you come up with! I ended up putting mine on the top of my kitchen cabinets for some added Fall decor, but you could use them as centerpieces on a dining table or on a mantle or on bookshelves – anywhere they’d look nice! It’s great that they won’t rot like real pumpkins, so all our crafty efforts might even be enjoyed next year.


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