PEI

DIY your own Christmas centrepiece in 8 easy steps

Elizabeth Ghiz Fay of Elizabeth's Garden taught a DIY centrepiece seminar to folks in Stratford, P.E.I., recently, and she showed us how easy and rewarding it can be.

'People are always amazed at how easy it is'

Two bows are better than one for Elizabeth Ghiz Fay's centrepiece. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

One great thing about living in a very rural province is many, if not most, people have access to fresh tree greenery — enough, at least, to make a holiday centrepiece.

Elizabeth Ghiz Fay of Elizabeth's Garden taught a DIY centrepiece seminar to folks in Stratford, P.E.I., recently, and she showed us how easy and rewarding it can be.

1. Gather your supplies

Everything you'll need to make your own Christmas centrepiece. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

The stuff you'll need for the centrepiece can be found at craft shops, floral studios and dollar stores. 

Fay suggests it could cost up to $35 for all of this.

  • wired ribbon for bow(s)
  • sharp knife
  • wire snips
  • florist's wire
  • floral tape
  • a dish that will hold an inch or two of water
  • oasis (an absorbent floral foam brick)
  • florist's wooden picks
  • candle holder to go in oasis
  • dripless taper candle
  • variety of greenery: fir, pine, cedar, holly, etc.
  • flowers (real or fake) 
  • pine cones
  • shiny ball ornaments
  • spray glue
  • glitter

2. Apply candle 

Elizabeth Ghiz Fay gently adds a dripless taper candle to the plastic holder in the oasis. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

Stick the candle holder in the centre of the oasis, which you have pre-soaked in water and placed in its dish. 

Firmly but gently add the candle. 

3. Add greenery

Poke in greenery a couple of inches until you can no longer see the oasis. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

Cut greenery with your sharp knife to a length you feel looks good, and begin poking it in to the oasis. 

Fill in with greenery until you can no longer see the base of the oasis. 

You can even add some boxwood — the variegated green and white variety makes a nice contrast — and other greenery from your garden.

4. Add some sparkle

Elizabeth Ghiz Fay adds some sparkle and shine to leafy greens. (Sara Fraser/CBC News)

For some added shine, spray leafy greens like salal with gold or silver spray — it doesn't have to look perfect. 

Or, spray on glue and sprinkle on glitter.

5. Add pine cones

Wire a pine cone to a florist's pick. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

You need to wire pine cones onto a florist's pick so there's something to secure it in to the oasis.

Loop a piece of florist's wire around the base of a pine cone and pull gently to tighten, then twist wire around a wooden florist's pick, and trim any excess wire with florist's wire snips.

Poke several of these pine cone picks into the oasis. 

"If you put a pine cone on one side, put another on the opposite side," for balance, Fay advised. 

6. Add flowers 

Cut stems to the length you want and add flowers to centrepiece. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

if you're using real flowers, cut the stems to a length you want. Cut on an angle using your knife and poke them into the oasis. If you decide to rearrange them, poke flowers into a new hole in the oasis — the old one won't hold it firmly. 

"Three is more pleasing to the eye," Fay said of how many flowers to add to this or any arrangement. 

7. Add some bling

Pops of red against the green evoke a very traditional Christmas feel. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

Wire some small, shiny Christmas balls in any bright colour to florist's picks and stick them in the oasis. Remember the rule of three. 

8. Put a bow on it

Fay demonstrates bow-making, and also suggests there are plenty of good YouTube videos to tehch you. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

Bow-making requires its own tutorial. I just make some loops with wired ribbon, loop wire around the middle and twist to hold, then wire onto a florist's pick. 

Fay used two bows in her centrepiece "for symmetry, so you can see it on all sides," she said.

Now, sit back and admire your work.

Elizabeth Ghiz Faye holds her finished creation. (Sara Fraser/CBC)

"Anyone can make an arrangement for their home just using greens from their garden and yard," Fay said. "People are always amazed at how easy it is." 

The flowers should last about a week and the greenery can last a month or longer, she said, if you remember to water it every couple of days. 

You can save many of the elements to re-use next year, Fay said, while sharing her top tip: use new oasis every year — old ones poked full of holes don't hold water. 

Elizabeth Ghiz Fay can be found online at peiflowers.com. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sara Fraser

Web Journalist

Sara has worked with CBC News in P.E.I. since 1988, starting with television and radio before moving to the digital news team. She grew up on the Island and has a journalism degree from the University of King's College in Halifax. Reach her by email at sara.fraser@cbc.ca.