Presenting a delightful holiday DIY that requires little time and skills—and only one ingredient you might have to buy. London-based set designer/creative director Sandy Suffield made her branch of shimmering silver oak leaves using nothing more than nature’s castoffs, twist ties, and aluminum foil tape, available at hardware stores. Sandy is a London art director and set designer—and the creator of The Engine House, a rescued ruin turned dream vacation rental in the Suffolk countryside.
Sandy generously shared photos and even diagrams of how to make her festive branch. It can be displayed on a wall, mantel, or vertically, even as a stand-in for a Christmas tree.
Photography by and courtesy of Sandy Suffield, The Engine House Suffolk (@TheEngineHouseSuffolk).
Materials
The Ingredients
- Found leaves to use as templates
- A leafless branch
- Aluminum foil tape, available at hardware stores and made for sealing ducts. (Here’s an example: Ace Hardware’s 3-Inch Cold Weather Aluminum Foil Tape; 50 yards for $26.99) Be sure to select a tape that’s a little wider than your leaves.
- Wire—Sandy notes that twist-ties with their paper removed work well.
- Pencil
- Scissors—any should work; aluminum foil tape is easy to cut and to shape.
Step-by-Step Silver Foil Leaves
1. Measure the length of your longest leaf and cut your tape to double that (Sandy’s are approximately two inches long). Peel off the paper backing,
place cut tape sticky side up.
2. Place wire in the center of the tape, half way up the length, leaving at least an inch of wire sitting outside of the tape.
3. Fold the tape over at its half-way point, sandwiching in the wire.
4. Place a leaf over the folded tape, align the midrib of the leaf
with the wire.
5. Trace around the leaf with a pencil.
6. Cut out the leaf.
7. Take a walk and find a fallen branch!
8. Tie the leaf to the branch by winding the wire around it.
The Finished Results
Browse the Remodelista archives for more Holiday Decor ideas. Here’s another Sandy Suffield DIY using materials on hand: The Engine House Paper Quilts
Good taste runs in the Suffield family: see A Shopkeeper’s 1930s Family Home in Winchester.
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