Circular Joy

Adorn your door with natural elements this season.

Editorโ€™s note: Find more tips for savoring the season in the full feature story.

A wreath often is one of the first things greeting guests who walk through your homeโ€™s front door, so why not make sure itโ€™s setting the best impression? Here are three natural wreath ideas to help your home welcome the holidays.

Eucalyptus (pictured above)
Emerald Design owner Whitney Muncy says evergreens such as cedar, pine, and spruce are especially popular at this time of year. โ€œThey give a seasonal look and are long-lasting as fresh greenery,โ€ she says. Eucalyptus, used in this wreath made for Evansville Living, also works perfectly in wreaths because itโ€™s durable and available year-round, Muncy adds. Other natural elements can give wreaths a certain style. โ€œIf someone wants a natural, organic look, then pine cones and mosses may be a good choice,โ€ she says. โ€œGrasses can give a wreath a bohemian style, and berries and dried flowers can add color.โ€ Feeling inspired? Sign up via Emerald Designโ€™s e-newsletter for the in-store wreath bar now through January, as well as a wreath-making class Nov. 30 during Small Business Saturday activities.

Photo by Zach Straw

Grapevine and Berries
Denise Cummings, a team member with Colonial Classics, says she goes into every wreath-making endeavor with few rules. For Evansville Living, Cummings “started with grapevine branches and foraged throughout our tree beds,” she explains. โ€œI selected some different textures and colors that pop and looked very natural.โ€ She used Nandina berries and pine cones in one wreath, and faux berries with no pine cones in the other. Each has various evergreen foliage and can be topped off with a neutral-toned bow. โ€œItโ€™s just going into your own backyard and the woods looking for textures and colors, grouping them together and repeating that pattern, wrapping them with floral wire and overlapping as you go around,โ€ Cummings says. Colonial Classics will host a wreath-making class this season, most likely in late November.

Photo by Zach Straw

Florals
Randi Gehlhausen, vice president of retail with Zeidlerโ€™s Flowers, says the inspiration for a wreath can start from sources such as Pinterest or a do-it-yourself idea sparked from within. Fall is the perfect time to undertake such a creative process, she adds, because of the โ€œcooler temperatures, all of the autumn colors that seem to turn everyoneโ€™s head. We can use our resources that have grown and flourished through the summer months.โ€ To craft a wreath that seamlessly transitions from autumn to winter, designer Marilyn Benton used white pine, cedar, magnolia, seeded eucalyptus, grevillea, Italian ruscus, foxtail fern, curly willow, scabiosa pods, lotus pods, caspia, white hypericum berries, pink mink protea, wheat stalks, green amaranthus, helleborus, succulents, and green moss. โ€œMany of these natural items can be found in the outdoors and are very accessible,โ€ Gehlhausen says.

Maggie Valenti
Maggie Valenti
Maggie Valenti joined Tucker Publishing Group in September 2022 as a staff writer. She graduated from Gettysburg College in 2020 with a bachelors degree in English. A Connecticut native, Maggie has ridden horses for 15 years and has hunt seat competition experience on the East Coast.

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