How to Make a Spring Wreath

I am so excited to share today a spring wreath I made from pinecones. You can make this wreath with Items you pick up in your yard. 

Pinecone flowers? Yes, these flowers are made by cutting pinecones into flowers! Today I will show you step by step how I made this gorgeous spring wreath.

best spring wreath DIY

This might be my favorite wreath that I have ever made. I called it a spring wreath, but it can also be a fall wreath! The best thing is that most of you can make it from things you can gather in your backyard. Can you guess what this wreath is made from?

You Made that?

Pinecone Flowers

spring-wreath-diy

I know it’s hard to believe. Because pine cones have never looked so good. This DIY was amazing and I love that it looks so great for Spring and Fall. I kind of made it up as I went along but I think you will find the DIY below fairly easy. The only hard part was cutting the pine cones.

Be sure to scroll to the bottom of this post to see my DIY video.

cut pine cone wreath

What You Need to Make a Pinecone Wreath

**All items with links are listed below**

Pine cones (about 18)

Grapevine wreath (I used a 16″)

Acrylic paint (alizarin crimson, medium yellow, white)

Tin snips or gardening shears

Glue gun

Assorted greenery (eucalyptus)

diy wreath for spring from pinecones

How to Make a Spring or Fall Wreath

Cutting the pine cones into flowers is the hardest part of making this wreath. I used a pair of red tin snips which didn’t work too great but I found a set of garden snips when I was almost done with the cutting that worked very well. (They are linked below.)

I was able to cut two flowers out of each pine cone and I didn’t use the top part. 

wire cutters to cut pine cones

I had to cut around each side of the pinecone before I could cut all the way through. On a few occasions, the pinecone flower broke into a few pieces. But that was no problem as I just put them back together with a glue gun.

how-to-cut-pinecones-for-a-wreath-

Each flower had two to three rows of scales. And I didn’t use the tops of the pinecones but there is no reason why you couldn’t.

thickness of cut pine cone

It took me a few hours. Most of the pine cones netted a total of two flowers. 

how to cut pinecones for wreath

I used 25 cut pine cone flowers on my wreath. Of course, you may need more or less depending on the size grapevine wreath you use. (I used a 16″.)

cut pine cones for wreath

Painting Pinecones

Painting the pine cones was my favorite part. And this is the part where you need to pay attention.

I have two really important color tips for you. So be sure to read below.

six colors of painted pine cones

It’s easy to buy six small bottles of paint and paint the pine cones each color. But often that will result in a wreath that isn’t color cohesive. Can you tell the colors of the pine cones below were made from two colors and white? Anytime your color palette is created from two colors, all of your colors will be cohesive.  

Mixing Colors

I mixed six colors using Alizarin Crimson (burgundy) and Medium Yellow (and white) and put them in paper cups. The colors ranged from lots of burgundy and a tiny bit of white or yellow to lots of yellow with a tiny bit of white or burgundy.

You can see the colors I mixed in the photo above. (I should have taken the photo before I added the highlights because some of them look more similar than they are.)

The next thing you need to do is paint all of your pine cones with a base coat. I painted six pine cones in each of the six colors. 

But here is the important step, I then went back and lightly brushed on some highlights of the other colors on each pine coneflower.

This is what my pine cones looked like after I painted the first coat.

painted pine cones without accents

And here is how they looked with a highlight of one of the other colors. After they dried I added even another one of the colors.

Adding paint accents to pine cones

This photo shows the pinecones and how the color highlights make them even more harmonious.

pine cones painted

I love how they look!

For a foolproof way to mix these colors, pick one color, a warm yellow, and white. Then mix to get different shades. You can see below that I used the Alizarin Crimson (which is a burgundy shade) and I added different but very small amounts of yellow and white to get the different shades.

The colors are bright and definitely perfect for a spring or fall wreath!

assorted painted pinecones

Assembling the Wreath

Assembling the wreath is very easy. I had painted some smaller pine cones because I thought I might need them. But I ended up leaving them out.

pine cones materials for wreath

I had some week-old eucalyptus in vases (that had dried) and it worked perfectly. You can use any type of greenery, faux or real, or in my case, dried and neglected.

I stuck the stems of the eucalyptus into the wreath. Don’t use too much, just enough to offer light coverage.

adding eucalyptus to wreath

Add in the greenery all the way around being sure to follow the same direction all the way around. Stick the stem into the wreath to secure it (although the glue used to attach the pinecones will also secure the greenery).

wreath with eucalyptus

With a hot glue gun, attach the pinecones to the wreath.

Add pinecone flowers to wreath

Work your way around the wreath by adding more pinecones.

Add more pinecone flowers to wreath

That’s all it takes!

Watch my video to see more details.

I can’t wait to make more of these!

Ready to make this amazing wreath? Click on the items below for everything you need to make this wreath.

Watch My Amazon Live

Click here to watch any of my Amazon Live shows. All shows are recorded.

You might enjoy all of the craft items I shared as seen in the Amazon Live featured below.

Check out all of these amazing DIY wreaths.

Magnolia Wreath – The Happy Housie // DIY Orange Wreath – The Handmade Home // Magnolia Farmhouse Wreath – Tatertots & Jello // Driftwood Welcome Wreath – My Sweet Savannah 

Front Door Decorating Ideas – Sanctuary Home Decor // Book Page Wreath – The DIY Mommy // Moss Ball Floral Wreath – Lolly Jane // Floral Winter Wreath – A Blue Nest // Spring Floral Wreath – Jennifer Maune

Heart Emoji Wreath – Cassie Bustamante // How To Make A Spring Wreath – My 100 Year Old Home // Strawflower Heart Wreath – Finding Lovely // Felt Flowers Wreath – Happy Happy Nester

Simple Spring Wreath – Art of Everyday Living // Coffee Filter Wreath – She Gave It A Go // Minimalistic Spring Wreath – Taryn Whiteaker Designs // How To Make A Spring Wreath – Hallstrom Home // Eucalyptus Wreath – Twelve on Main

Pin the image below to your Craft or spring decor boards on Pinterest (just click the Pin button in the top left corner). You can also follow along with me on Pinterest!

Pinecone Wreath for Spring or Fall

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115 Comments

  1. The video did not play! I’d love to see it! Can you repost the video? I definitely want to make a wreath like yours. So pretty!

  2. This wreath is SO beautiful! I love the colors and I’m not sure I know exactly what paints you used. You said they could be gotten at JoAnn’s but what is the brand name and did you use two or three colors for the pinecones? I have a ton of pinecones and have been wondering what to do with them. Now I know! Thanks for the idea.

  3. You just amaze me. I am the farthest thing from an artist as you can get. I would like to try this I don’t understand how you mix the colors though. Can you do a video of you mixing and crushing it on the pinecones? Thank you so much you always inspire.

  4. I am so excited for this project! I love using things from my yard to decorate and especially pine cones. I’ve cut my pine cones and can hardly wait to get to painting them! (Cutting them is definitely work, but so worth the pretty result.)

  5. I love this wreath but my husband and I were struggling to cut the pinecones. I found that a Dremel tool with a cutting blade did the trick! I have photos of the tool but don’t know how to add them here. Thanks for such great instructions on this gorgeous wreath!

  6. Great looking wreath, Leslie! I do have a faster way to cut pine cones. I take my big rose loppers and cut them and it takes 48 seconds to make two flowers and a pinecone top, which I used as filler on a another wreath I made. Contact me and I will send you the video!

  7. Love the pine cone wreath. I actually liked the look of the wreath with just the greenery you put on it before you glued the pine cones. You gave really good step by step instructions.

  8. I’ve made many pine cone wreaths, and yours is beautiful! Please be sure to wash and/or bake your cones before using. You don’t want any critters running around your house! Directions are readily available online. I also use large garden loppers to cut pine cones. Easy (I did make the mistake of doing an entire carton of pinecones in one afternoon and ended up with shoulder tendinitis, so use caution!). Now I ask the husband to do it!

  9. Beautiful beautiful work! I really want to try this project! Would pine cones found in nature work once baked? I know some are brown and some are gray, not sure if the age of the cone matters? Also, what brand of paint did you use?

    1. Yes, they would. I used the ones I bought at Joann, but these will work fine. Just bake them to get rid of any bugs!
      Leslie

  10. Hi Leslie! I just came across your blog and the beautiful spring wreath you made. The pinecone flowers look like zinnias!

    Can you tell me how you painted the cones, did you dip the cones in paint or paint each “petal” with a brush?

    Thank you for sharing your creativity! Jolene

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