April Window Wreaths

April Window Wreaths mark the fourth release in my year-long window-wreath series, a collection of monthly templates designed to bring handmade creativity into your home.

With nine brand-new April Window Wreaths to trace and place on your glass, this collection continues the series’ best: simple techniques, calming creativity, and thoughtfully designed seasonal art. April embraces the fullness of spring, inspired by fresh greenery, blooming florals, soft bows, and the beauty of new growth everywhere you look. These designs capture the moment when the season truly comes alive, helping your home feel lighter, brighter, and filled with spring’s charm.

A white floral wreath design is drawn on a window, with green leafy trees and bushes visible outside.
Four images: a decorative glass ornament, a kitchen with flowers on the counter, a living room with white furniture, and a bowl of soup with scattered toppings.
You Made that?

April Window Wreaths

A black-and-white floral wreath design is taped to a glass door, with a porch and outdoor greenery visible through the window.

My wreath window art designs began as part of my A Handmade Christmas series. Hand-drawn wreaths traced onto glass. Simple materials. Slow making. Creative calm.

The response was overwhelming in the best possible way. Thousands of downloads. Hundreds of thousands of views. Messages from people across the country sharing photos of their windows, families tracing together, and homes glowing with handmade seasonal art.

From that moment, a new tradition was born. Monthly Window Wreath Art..

Following the Christmas release, January winter wreaths, and the early-spring transition in February and March, this April collection continues the series as the season fully comes to life.

These wreaths are inspired by blooming florals, fresh greenery, soft ribbons, and the natural beauty that surrounds us this time of year. There is a sense of fullness in April, when everything feels brighter, more vibrant, and completely awake.

While the inspiration evolves with the season, the process remains the same. Intentional, calming, and creatively fulfilling. The same simple act of tracing that has made this series so meaningful from the very beginning.

These April Window Wreath templates are part of a twelve-month series, with nine new designs released each month throughout the year, creating a beautiful and evolving collection of traceable wreaths that bring handmade creativity to your windows in every season.

A 3x3 grid of nine black and white floral wreath templates, each with a different design and labeled with its corresponding size and number.

Although sizes are listed for each wreath, please know there is some flexibility. If you cut off the margins or flip the wreath (where applicable), you can use some of the larger sizes in a smaller window.

Download Your Wreaths Here

Click here to get the April wreath templates. You can also select an entire year of wreath templates here.

If you already bought the year of window wreaths, you can log in here.

Why Window Wreath Art Works

A white floral wreath design is drawn on a window, with green trees and foliage visible outside through the glass.

Window art feels especially meaningful as we move into April. It brings the beauty of the season into your home without adding weight or clutter. It takes up no space, requires no storage, yet completely transforms a room’s atmosphere.

There is something especially magical this time of year as the light changes. The days are brighter, the sun lingers longer, and hand-drawn designs seem to glow against the glass. The lines feel softer. The designs feel more organic. They become part of the rhythm of your home rather than something simply placed within it.

April window wreaths invite a different kind of creativity. One that feels light, fresh, and inspired by what is happening just outside your windows. Blooming branches, delicate petals, and new greenery all influence the designs, making them feel connected to the season in a very natural way.

More than anything, they create space to slow down. To trace, to make, and to enjoy. The quiet process of welcoming a new season into your home is a way that feels simple, intentional, and beautifully handmade.

Window Cleaning Tip

A bottle of Goo Gone, a bottle of Windex, and a blue sponge sit on a marble countertop with glass containers in the background.

I have heard from a few of you that cleaning the windows is harder than it should be.

I have come up with a very easy solution!

Spray the old window wreath with Goo Gone, then gently scrub it with the scrub side of a sponge. You won’t believe how little effort it takes to clean off the design. Next, clean the window twice with Windex and wipe it with a paper towel. Using glass cleaner will make sure there isn’t any Goo Gone on your window.

That’s all you need to do!

How to Trace the Wreaths to Your Windows

Four sheets of paper with parts of a tulip wreath outline are arranged on a table, along with an instruction sheet and a box of black poster markers.

1. Download the templates

Click this link above to download the nine April Window Wreaths. You will also have an option to subscribe to my monthly window wreath designs.

2. Decide which wreath belongs in which room

I like choosing one main design for the kitchen window and then coordinating styles for the family room, dining room, entryway, etc.

3. Print the Wreath

Once downloaded, print the wreath in Adobe. It will print on multiple pages at the listed size.

If you want a different-sized wreath than what is listed, you can use BlockPoster.com. It’s free and prints your design across multiple pages.

4. Trim the borders

A hand uses scissors to cut along the edge of a printed black and white floral line drawing on paper labeled “BLOCK POSTERS.”.

Cut away the white margin around each sheet with scissors so your lines match up seamlessly.

Tape the wreath together.

Black and white outline drawing of a floral wreath with tulip-like flowers, assembled from separate papers and taped together; a tape dispenser is placed on the right side.

5. Tape the template to the outside of the window

A black and white floral wreath outline is taped to a glass door, with trees and a white fence visible outside.

Use painter’s tape or clear tape. Position the wreath exactly where you want it.

6. Trace from the inside

This is important!
If you trace on the outside of the window, it will wash away when it rains.

Tracing from the inside protects it, even on stormy days.

What You Need to Trace the Wreaths

A hand uses a black marker to trace a tulip wreath design onto a window or glass surface from a paper template taped behind it.

You don’t need much, and you probably have most of it:

  • Acrylic paint markers (my favorite brand is linked here – white looks amazing in winter)
  • Painter’s tape
  • Paper towels (for any “oops” moments)
  • A steady hand – though trust me, perfection doesn’t matter at all!


On this blog, I may use affiliate links, which means I earn a small commission if you make a purchase through them. The price will be the same whether you use the affiliate link or go directly to the vendor’s website using a non-affiliate link.

The paint markers wash off with a cloth and water. You can also use a paint scraper.

A New Kind of Seasonal Decorating

A white floral wreath design with six flowers and leaves is drawn on a glass surface with a window in the background.

One of the reasons I love window wreath art so much is that it redefines what seasonal decorating looks like.

It’s not about bins of decor, shopping, or filling shelves.

It’s about creativity, ritual, and tradition. And it’s about making something with your hands.

These wreaths don’t replace your decor. They complement it and add beauty without adding clutter. They bring seasonal feeling without seasonal chaos.

And they’re temporary in the best possible way. When the season changes, you simply wipe them away and start again.

How People Are Using Their Window Wreaths

One of my favorite parts of this project has been seeing how you use them in your homes.

Kitchen windows. Front doors. Bathroom mirrors. Office windows. Craft rooms. Studio spaces.

Or in my case, on the doors to our wine cellar.

Some families trace together, and some use them as a time for creative quiet. Some treat them like seasonal rituals, and many of us mome make it a monthly tradition.

It’s become more than decor. It’s become a creative habit.

A Creative Invitation

A white door with a glass window pane featuring a simple white marker drawing of a wreath; greenery is visible outside.

If you have never tried window wreath art before, April is a beautiful time to begin.

You do not need to be an artist. You do not need complicated supplies, and you do not need experience.

All you need is a window, a simple marker, and a little curiosity.

Trace. Draw. Let the lines guide you.

Welcome the season slowly and allow your home to reflect the quiet shift happening outside.

Let your windows become part of the story of spring. Download the wreaths here.

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A white wreath design with decorated eggs is drawn on a window, with greenery visible outside. Text at the bottom reads "March Window Wreaths.

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