Arranging natural materials creatively requires knowledge of balance and proportion. Some people seem to have natural instincts in this area but the skills can be learned from floral arranging books.
Drooping
While there are many places/ways to start, I usually start with the hanging material (spillers) to cover the edges of the pot. These have to be set in almost horizontal if you want them to hang down.
Favourites are:
- Spanish broom
- pine
-spruce branches
Uprights
Sometimes if I have interesting tall materials (thrillers), I arrange them first to establish height and then work out and down.
Some of my favourite tall branches and twigs are:
- dried goats beard stalks
- corkscrew hazel
- yellow - twig dogwood, red dogwood
- spirea with dried seed heads
- forsythia stalks (which are very light and work well with dogwood branches)
Sometimes uprights look good all by themselves!
I certainly have nothing this interesting to add to my arrangements.
Fillers
Once these two aspects have been arranged you need to fill our the arrangement (fillers) by applying the branches at roughly 45 degrees. I have lots of possibilities in my garden:
- boxwood
-yellow mound cedar
- holly
- blue spruce
- rhododendron leaves
- dried hydrangea blooms
Accents
These are the final touches that hightlight and brighten your arrangements. The sky is the limit here.
- sprayed grapevine spheres
- brightly coloured plastic ornaments
- wooden Santas
- plastic ribbons
- plastic Christmas flowers
- artificial birds
- artificial birds
woven twig stars
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