I hope you are feeling great!
I've been doing a lot of projects involving dried flowers and flower pressing. These treasures from nature are quite inspiring and don't cost anything if you already have the materials on hand. I also like to do it because it preserves a moment in time that I will never get back.
During the summer, I pick up hydrangeas from the park. I flatten it in the flower press and frame it afterwards. I like that the lilac colors of the petals are still vibrant.
In the winter, you'll still see some hydrangea bushes around but the flowers turn into these petrified specimens. Their color and soul seem to have disintegrated with the cold. But hey, let's give them a chance.
I took some dried hydrangeas home and put them in my flower press.
I also separated the petals in smaller clusters.
I sandwiched the flowers in between layers of paper and cardboard.
I screwed the lid on and tightened it every day for a week.
This is what the flowers look like after pressing...TADA!
Let me show you some crafty ways to use these dried hydrangea flowers:
I got this clear locket from the craft store. I gently placed the pressed hydrangea petal inside the locket and closed the hinge.
A necklace charm with antique and sentimental feels...TADA!
For the next craft, let's use dried hydrangea flowers to add flourish to our cards and letters.
I've seen calligraphers do this trick. They add dried flowers like baby's breath at the center of the envelope.
Pour a bit of melted wax and emboss a wax seal to keep the pressed hydrangea in place.
Such a romantic touch! But these should be hand-delivered because the dried flowers will never survive the mail. But if you'd like to mail them, put these inside a padded mailer envelope.
For the final craft idea, here's what we'll need: pressed hydrangea flowers, a mason jar with removable two-piece lid, scrapbook paper and acetate (both cut in the size of the mason jar lid).
Sandwich the elements in this order: (1)flat bottom of mason jar lid, (2)scrapbook paper, (3)dried hydrangea flowers, (4)acetate, (5)screw-on mason jar lid. Use one finger to hold the elements in place while you screw the lid onto the jar.
It makes for a nice memory jar. Fill it with souvenirs from a trip (ex. small rocks and shells) or use it to wrap small gifts like jewelry.
Note that even without a flower press, you can still press flowers using heavy books (just position the flowers in between layers of paper and cardboard to protect the pages of the books).
These are just a few ways I turned dried hydrangea flowers from blah to TADA!
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I love the idea of sealing an envelope with wax AND dried flowers!
ReplyDeleteIt's so sweet, right? Thanks Priscilla!
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