Repurpose and Upcycle Christmas Decorations

We save (or I do) my Christmas decorations, tree ornaments and even the leftover wrapping paper and cards, for the next Christmas holidays. I like to save the cards people have sent me too. But, what can you do with broken ornaments, decorations you weren’t that fond of or when you just have more decorations than space to store them?

Recycle Christmas Ornaments

Use Christmas ornaments or cards to decorate a picture frame. Use a large frame for a painting or smaller frames for photographs. Cut and paste the images from the cards and turn them into a collage of artwork. Use the photo frames for photographs you took during the holidays. Family photos or something beautiful you saw one day – like the perfect winter scene.

Broken decorations are also nice to use on a frame. But, be careful with anything sharp. Some broken ornaments are very thin and are not easy to work with. If you have broken fragile ornaments and don’t want to try gluing them back together for next year, then glue them to something else. Add some glitter and shine to a plant pot. Press the pieces deeply into the glue so you won’t have them falling off as the pot gets moved around.

Recycle Christmas Lights

Ornaments and lights which are not broken can be used to upcycle an old light. Pick a light you already have or have fun decorating a vintage (or secondhand) chandelier from the bargain bin. Paint it some groovy colour. Add a string of Christmas lights looped around it. Hang ornaments from it. If you have the old Christmas light bulbs you can even use those in place of the light bulbs in the light itself. Live in blue, green, red… pick your colour for the evening.

You can reuse strings of Christmas lights for many occasions. If you have strings in one colour twine them together with plain white and wrap them around stair bannisters, outdoors or indoors. Quick and pretty decorations for a birthday party, Valentines Day, St. Patrick’s Day, depending on the colour of the lights. A string of multi coloured lights can decorate and give you extra light downstairs (if you have a basement, laundry room, etc.) A string of lights can colour your world and they are made energy efficient these days so they don’t take a lot of power to stay on as long as you would like.

Poinsettia Brooch for After the Holidays

poinsettia brooch

If you give them some neglect and yet don’t completely forget them, poinsettias can last for years. They probably won’t flower again. To get them to flower you have to be really strict at the 12 hours of darkness and then 12 hours of light. Not so easy to pull off in the Canadian winter when it is fully dark around 5:00PM. But, I have kept a poinsettia plant alive for years. Then I moved and all my plants died from some kind of fungus (even the cactus got it).

Poinsettias are one of my favourite Christmas things. Most years I find a new poinsettia brooch. This year I didn’t find one in time for the holidays. I really like this one, but I don’t want to spend more on the credit cards. So, I will settle for having it’s picture up instead.

Christmas Card Trees

xmascardtree

These free-standing paper Christmas trees add colorful, country charm to your Christmas decor. Cut various size circles out of Christmas cards, scalloping the edges of some. From the center of each circle cut out a 3/16-inch pie-shaped wedge. Curl the circle into a cone shape (pattern side up), overlap the ends, and tape the back.

To make the base, cut a 2-inch foam ball in half and a 1/8-inch dowel to desired height. Place the foam ball flat side down, add a drop of hot glue to an end of the dowel, and push the dowel through the foam ball until it stops. Slide the largest cone shape down the dowel, and then twist a small rubber band around the dowel; continue alternating progressively smaller cone shapes with rubber bands. Top the paper Christmas tree with the smallest cone shape and a ribbon.

via Christmas Card Projects: Decorative Ways to Recycle Christmas Cards.