Winter Pine Cone Crafting

Behold our goofy pine cone animals! The antlers are contorted filbert twigs and the hat an Echinacea seeadhead.
My doctor's office is surrounded by white pines (Pinus sylvestris) that produce loads of the prettiest, largest white pine cones I've ever seen. They used to waste away on the ground until the scavenger in me kicked in a couple of years ago, and I asked if I could collected some. Since then, we've made pine cone crafting a yearly tradition.
Wreaths are expensive but with a basic $4.00 grapevine wreath base from Michael's, our pine cones, some florist's wire and a few baubles, we constructed a very pretty pine cone wreath for very little money. I think the final tab was $7.00. I sprayed it with a little balsam room spray from Williams-Sonoma as a final wintery flourish.
Glitter pine cone ornaments remind me of childhood. Isn't that a craft that every kid creates sometime from preschool to third grade? This year we were inspired by mini pompons and google eyes in addition to iridescent glitter. The ornaments don't look complete without little ribbons. We like to hang ours upside down as one would see them in nature.
Pine cone animals are cute and fun to make. Twigs make great legs and antlers for mini deer and bits of bark serve as perfect little ears. We also used a few of our flower seedheads from the garden as heads and ears. Parts requiring fast, secure fixation, like legs, were hot glued on by me. (For safety's sake, I keep the glue gun far away from the children.)
All these things make fun (and cheap) gifts. They also create pleasing memories for the kids. And any cones we don't use for crafts get stuck here and there indoors or out as decoration. No waste.

Our wreath has a little golden bird my daughter picked out.

The final wreath had tinsel embellishments alla Franzie.

The rest of the cones served as rustic trees in our mantle winter village.



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