A while back, my mom bought me a variety of unfinished paper mache and wood cutout Christmas trees from Hobby Lobby knowing that I would have fun figuring out a creative way to decorate them. I stalled and stalled and didn’t do anything with these Christmas tree crafts for a couple of years – not because I didn’t have any ideas, but because I had too many ideas and couldn’t make a decision. Does anyone else have this same problem? I call it craft indecisiveness!
Finally I realized that I could use my indecisiveness to my advantage by creating six distinctly different DIY Christmas Trees – three cones, and three flat wood Christmas trees. Today I want to share three simple tutorials for decorating paper mache cones from Hobby Lobby to create glam Christmas decorations on a major budget
I started my DIY Christmas Tree project the same way most craft projects start in my house – by pulling together paints, scrapbook papers, ribbons, and various other supplies from around my house and piling them all in the center of the kitchen table. After staring at the supplies for a while, I decided to start with the paper mache cone-shaped Christmas trees.
DIY Fur Christmas Tree. Let’s begin with the Christmas tree that I covered in white fur ribbon, which I purchased at Michael’s. Since the base of the tree would remain exposed, I started by giving the tree a coat of white acrylic paint. I unrolled all nine yards of the fur ribbon and cut strips the right length, then used my hot glue gun to begin attaching the fur strips to the tree.
I was concerned about maintaining the narrow, pointed shape of the top of the tree, so I knew I couldn’t have six strip of thick fur overlapping at the very top of the tree. Instead I started by affixing three strips of fur that were only about three quarters of the height of the tree. I spaced these strips evenly around the tree, leaving room between each to affix three more full length strips of fur ribbon.
With the final three strips of fur glued to the lower part of the tree, I used a scissors to cut the top of each strip into a point. I then finished gluing these three fur strips to the top of the tree. The tree initially looked odd because of the different layers of the overlapping strips of fur, but as soon as I fluffed up the fur with the fingers, the tree really took shape and looked perfect.
Once the paint was dry, I began wrapping the tree with the silver bead garland, using hot glue to affix the end of the first string of beads. The spot where I glued the initial strand of beads became the “back” of the tree. As I added additional strands of beads, I ensured that each started and stopped at the back of the tree so that, when placed on my mantel, none of the hot glue will be visible. In total, I used about eight and a half yards of bead garland to wrap the tree from top to bottom.
Since I knew that the paper mache base of the tree would most likely show through between the scrapbook paper hearts, I started by painting the tree with two coats of silver metallic acrylic paint. Then, before attaching the hearts to the tree, I curled each around a pencil. Rather than curing them one by one, I found that it worked well to stack up three to four hearts and curl them all at once. Then I would glue those hearts to the tree before curling three or four more.
I started at the bottom of tree, and used a dot of hot glue at the point of each heart and a dot of hot glue in the center of each heart. I worked my way around the tree, one row at a time. On each row, I overlapped the edges of the hearts, and each row also overlapped the row below.