I have to admit, I normally skip right over Thanksgiving. We’ve rarely been home for it, and our Halloween and Christmas over-the-top-ness tends to just swallow it whole. But this year I’m actually hosting, so I had to at least do a little something.
I’ve got a great centerpiece idea for tomorrow, so stay tuned, but for today I thought I’d share the first holiday impression my house makes.
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That big black line down the middle is so distracting. So here’s one wreath on its own.
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By the time I decided I was going to throw up some Thanksgiving decorations, all the fall stuff was pretty much gone from Michael’s, and I had zero time to make a trip down to my favorite floral design mart, so I had to make due with what I found.
I started with a cheap pine-like wreath, and to try to tone down some of the green, I dunked the ends in gold glitter. Then I raided the Christmas pick section and looked for anything in the copper family. I knew I was out of luck if I wanted fall leaves, but I thought that there could be enough glittered leaves and acorns and berries that I could still pull something together. I bought enough picks to completely surround the wreath (agian, trying to tone down that bright green).
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After I finished the glitter process, I wrapped a glittery brown swirl ribbon around the wreath a few times, tucking the ribbon in among the branches, and hot gluing the ends down. Then I just started adding the picks and smearing hot glue all over the place. After I was about half done, I wasn’t loving the look of it. So I looked around my studio for something else I could toss in there, and that’s when I came across the feathers.
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I’ve had two enormous boxes of feathers sitting in my garage for about six years, another left over from that legendary failed business attempt. They come sewn together on a string like a garland, so I cut some off and stuck it around wherever I thought it needed a little something. I know I’ve seen some sold the same way at Michael’s. Look in the floral design section by the grapevine.
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To finish it off I tied a bow out of that same glittery swirl brown ribbon and one from a solid copper ribbon I had lying around. Nothing fancy, just the same type of bow you’d use to tie your shoes, and then I fussed with it till it looked nice. I glued those ribbons on top of each other with a little feathery rosette and the look was complete.
Back when I worked at Michael’s I got to be friendly with the floral design person, and she taught me a ton. The most important lesson was: this stuff is not hard. It really couldn’t be any easier. You just take a bunch of stuff that you like and think looks good together, and you tie it up with a bow. There’s absolutely nothing to be intimidated by.
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