Well, I was immediately drawn to a pine cone basket that was on the floor. It was pine cones in a large basket that was decorated with berries, ribbons, lace, and assorted dried floral.
I thought it was really pretty and would make a great Christmas decoration until I looked at the price. They wanted close to $180 for the basket which I thought at the time was outrageous. But, the basket was lovely and I thought it would make a wonderful Christmas decoration.
So, I decided to make my own. After all, I had pine cones all over my lawn from the white pine and evergreen trees that had fallen that year. Why not use them and create my own pine cone baskets? I certainly had plenty of pine cones of different sizes and types. And, they were free.
I decided that I didn't really want to take the time that was required to properly dry my pine cones in the stove as it would take way too much time and would not be worth the effort. So, I decided to store my pine cones in a box for a year and let them dry that way.
Of course I had a LOT of boxes in my basement, but I didn't mind that. To my surprise my pine cones actually dried fine in their boxes and had opened up beautifully by the following year.
So, I decided which baskets I was going to spray paint, which baskets I was going to leave as they were, how many pine cone baskets I was going to make, etc. I laid all my baskets out on the floor so I could decide which pine cones to use for which basket, which wire ribbons I was going to use, which dried floral filler I wanted to use, which Christmas tree bulbs I wanted to use, and which decorations I wanted to use.
Oh, well! I LOVED creating them and had plenty of relatives I could give them to so it was a win-win. At least that's what I tried to tell my husband when he saw the number of baskets I was making. My sister keeps telling me I'm married to a saint. Given my over abundance for creativity and desire or lack thereof to do anything in moderation I'd have to agree he is a saint.
I spent a couple of days spray painting the baskets red, gold, and blue and then proceeded to make my first basket. Of course I didn't make a small basket first. Oh, no! I went for the largest basket I had spray painted. I had visions of this beautiful gold pine cone basket decorating my front foyer and wanted to make this first. If it came out okay I'd make the rest.
Since the basket was really large I decided not to fill it completely with pine cones but to line the bottom with green florist foam. For a more realistic woodland feel first I placed enough Spanish moss along the inside of the basket so as to cover any openings in the sides of the basket. Then I packed the bottom tightly with green foam so that it filled the basket to within 4 inches of the top. Once my basket was firmly packed I glued my first layer of pine cones to the foam. For this layer I used some of the uglier pine cones I had collected and some of the broken ones. It didn't matter as no one was going to see them anyway.
When I was happy with the way the arrangement looked I sprayed the basket and pine cones with varnish to seal everything. Then I proceeded to add and glue the various dried floral I had selected for this arrangement. I cut the cinnamon sticks into various sizes and glued them throughout the basket. Then I created two large bows with multiple loops and wired them to the sides of the basket.
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