February Window Wreaths

February Window Wreaths mark the second release in my year-long window wreath series, a collection of monthly designs created to bring handmade creativity into your home all year long.

With nine brand-new February Window Wreaths to trace and place on your glass, this release carries forward everything you loved about the original window wreath projects, simple making, calm creativity, and meaningful seasonal design, while transitioning the home gently from winter into spring.

White floral and heart designs are drawn on a glass door, with a view of a wooden table, chairs, and a grassy backyard visible through the glass.
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?

February Window Wreaths

A woman stands in front of a black door holding a large paper with a wreath outline design, with house number 2036 visible above the door.

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 all over the country sharing photos of their windows, their families tracing together, and their homes glowing with handmade art.

So a new tradition was born. Monthly Window Wreath Art.

After the Christmas and January winter wreaths, this February collection continues the seasonal window art tradition as an intentional, creative practice.

These February Window Wreath templates are part of a twelve-month series, with new designs being released each month throughout the year, creating a beautiful, evolving collection of traceable wreaths for your windows.

A sheet displaying nine black and white February wreath templates, each with varying floral and heart designs, labeled with their respective sizes and numbers.

February is the next chapter in that story, and I’m so excited to share a brand‑new collection of nine February Window Wreaths designed specifically for this season. Soft. Romantic. Seasonal. Calm. Creative.

And made to be traced and placed in your windows just like the Christmas and winter collections.

These wreaths are intentionally designed to feel like a transition. They sit beautifully between winter and spring. Between cozy and fresh. Between calm and color. They work for Valentine’s Day, for everyday February decor, and for the slow shift toward spring.

You can download the February wreath templates here. You can also get a subscription to twelve months of my wreath templates.

Why Window Wreath Art Works

A white line drawing of a wreath with leaves, hearts, and a bow is displayed on a window or glass door.

Window art is different than traditional decor. It doesn’t take up space. It doesn’t require storage. It doesn’t create clutter. And yet it completely transforms a room.

There’s something magical about seeing handmade art in the light of a window. It feels lighter. Softer. More intentional. It becomes part of the home instead of just something added to it.

Window wreaths are also uniquely interactive. They invite creativity. They are tracing, drawing, and creating together. They turn decorating into an experience instead of a task.

The February Collection

This new February collection includes nine hand‑drawn wreath designs created specifically for tracing on windows, glass doors, and mirrors. Each wreath is intentionally balanced, trace‑friendly, and designed with clean lines that work beautifully with chalk markers or window pens.

The designs include:

  • Soft floral wreaths
  • Heart‑inspired wreaths
  • Seasonal greenery
  • Romantic shapes
  • Transitional winter‑to‑spring elements

Each wreath is unique, but they all belong together. They share the same line style, spacing, and flow, so they feel cohesive as a set.

These are not loud designs. They are calm. Thoughtful. Gentle. Some are simple, and some have more detail. The kind of decor that feels peaceful instead of busy.

Download Your Wreaths Here

Click here to download the February wreath templates. You can select the nine February wreaths, and also have an option to receive an entire year of wreath templates.

How to Trace the Wreaths to Your Windows

Six sheets of paper form a large black-and-white line drawing of a wreath with flowers, leaves, hearts, and a bow, laid out on a gridded cutting mat.

1. Download the templates

Click this link above to download the nine Winter 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

https://my100yearoldhome.thrivecart.com/february-wreath-window-art-templates

Once downloaded, print the wreath in Adobe. It will print onto many different pages to the size listed.

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

Line drawing of a heart-shaped wreath with leaves, tulips, and hearts, topped with a bow; design printed on six sheets of paper arranged in a grid.

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

5. Tape the template to the outside of the window

A white door with a glass window covered by a sheer curtain featuring a black outline drawing of a wreath with hearts and a bow.

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 and it rains, your artwork will wash away. Tracing from the inside protects it, even on stormy days.

What You Need to Trace the Wreaths

A black and white line drawing of a wreath with tulips, leaves, hearts, and a large bow, printed on multiple sheets of paper and taped to a glass door.

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 sometimes use affiliate links, which means I earn a small commission if you purchase via the link. 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

White window drawing of a large bow, leaves, tulips, and hearts, with an indoor dining area and garden visible through the glass.

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. It’s not about shopping. It’s not about filling shelves.

It’s about creativity. It’s about ritual. It’s about tradition. It’s about making something with your hands.

These wreaths don’t replace your decor. They complement it. They 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. Some use them as a creative time of quiet. Some treat them like seasonal rituals. Some make it a monthly tradition.

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

Why February Matters

February can feel like an in‑between month. The holidays are over. Spring hasn’t arrived. The energy dips. The light starts to shift. There’s a longing for something fresh, but a need for calm.

That’s exactly what these wreaths are designed to bring.

Not loud. Not busy. Not overwhelming.

Just beauty. Creativity. Softness.

They’re meant to make your home feel loved, not decorated.

A Creative Invitation

White marker drawing of a heart-themed wreath with leaves and dots on a window, showing a green yard and trees outside, and a chandelier reflecting in the glass.

If you’ve never tried window wreath art before, February is the perfect place to start.

You don’t need artistic skill. You don’t need special tools. You don’t need experience.

You just need a window, a marker, and a willingness to create.

Trace. Draw. Experiment. Have fun.

Let your home become a canvas. Download the wreaths here.

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2 Comments

  1. Such a great idea ! I’m going to do my porch door window .I hope you have a summer one with shells ,I live in Florida ,it would be perfect ! Thank you for all your crafty ideas !

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