Holiday Decorating with Natural Materials
Holiday Decorating with Nature
Deck the Halls Naturally: Holiday Decorating with Natural Garland, Dried Oranges & Cranberries
The holiday season is here, and it’s time to bring warmth and cheer to our homes. If you're looking to decorate in a way that's both timeless and eco-friendly, natural garlands, dried oranges, and strung cranberries are perfect choices. These natural elements evoke nostalgia, smell incredible, and add a handmade touch to your decor.
In a world of plastic ornaments and synthetic materials, natural decorations stand out for their sustainability and charm. Not only are they biodegradable, but they also bring the outdoors inside, filling your home with the cozy essence of the season. Plus, crafting with natural materials is a fun activity for all ages, making holiday prep an enjoyable family tradition.
Here's how to create stunning decorations with these simple yet elegant materials.
Crafting a Natural Garland
Natural garlands are the backbone of holiday decor. Here's how to make your own:
Materials Needed:
Fresh greenery (pine, cedar, eucalyptus, or a mix)
Floral wire or twine
Scissors or garden shears
Instructions:
Gather your greenery, trimming it into manageable sections.
Lay the pieces on a flat surface, overlapping the stems slightly.
Secure each piece with floral wire as you work, building the garland to your desired length.
For an extra festive touch, weave in dried orange slices, cinnamon sticks, or pinecones.
Tip: Keep your garland fresh by misting it with water every couple of days and avoiding direct sunlight.
Making natural dried orange slice garlands
Dried orange slices are a holiday favorite, bringing a pop of color and a subtle citrus aroma. Here’s how to make them:
What You’ll Need:
Fresh oranges
Sharp knife
Baking sheet
Parchment paper
Steps:
Preheat your oven to 200°F (93°C).
Slice oranges into ¼-inch thick rounds.
Arrange slices on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
Bake for 2-3 hours, flipping occasionally, until dry but not burnt.
After the slices cool, string with twine and a large darning needle or poke holes with small scissors.
Use these slices as ornaments, garland embellishments, or even as gift toppers.
Making cranberry garlands
Cranberry garlands are such a fun, festive tradition and the ruby red berries look so beautiful amidst all the green pine boughs and other Christmas decorations. This can be a super fun seasonal holiday tradition if you have kids too. It’s so easy, and the result is magical.
Materials:
Dark-colored string / baking string
Tapestry needle
Fresh cranberries (can be found in most grocery stores)
Fiskars scissors
Steps
First, measure how long you would like your garland to be. Cut a piece of string to that length, plus a few inches.
Now take your string and thread it through your needle.
Next, dump your bag of cranberries into a bowl for easy access.
Now you can start threading the cranberries onto your string! Simply poke the needle through the middle of the cranberry and slide it all the way down. Tie a knot at the end so the berries don’t slide off the end
Keep sliding cranberries along the string until it’s full.
Remove the needle and tie a knot at the other end of the string. Clip the excess string.
This cranberry garland is such a versatile and beautiful Christmas decoration. You can use it to decorate your Christmas tree, string it along your mantlepiece, hang it along a wall, drape it around a window, and so much more. I love the little pop of color it can add to a room, too! The best part is, cranberries (as we mentioned before) have a great shelf life. They dry out after a while, but still look pretty that way. And after you’re done with them, they’re biodegradable, too!
Fall Styling Tips for Living with Seasonality
Embracing the Seasons: Fall Interior Decorating & Styling with Nature
Embracing Autumn: Foraging for Fall Foliage to Style Your Home
As the leaves begin to change, nature provides us with a vibrant palette that can transform our living spaces into cozy, seasonal retreats. Foraging for fall foliage is not only a delightful way to enjoy the crisp air and stunning colors but also a sustainable method to bring the beauty of autumn indoors. Here’s how to gather, style, and appreciate the rich textures and hues of fall foliage.
The Beauty of Foraging
Foraging is a wonderful way to connect with nature and engage your senses. As you wander through parks, forests, or your own backyard, take a moment to appreciate the diversity of colors—from fiery reds and oranges to muted yellows and deep browns. The process itself can be meditative, allowing you to slow down and enjoy the sights and sounds of the season.
Tips for Responsible Foraging
Know Your Environment: Familiarize yourself with local flora. Some plants may be protected or toxic, so it’s essential to research what’s safe to collect.
Leave No Trace: Only take what you need and avoid stripping trees or plants bare. A few leaves from each plant can ensure they continue to thrive.
Check for Pesticides: If you’re foraging in urban areas, be mindful of potential pesticide use. Stick to areas that are free from chemical treatments.
Timing is Key: The best time to forage is during the peak of fall when colors are at their most vibrant. Check local foliage reports to find the perfect moment.
What to Gather
When foraging for fall foliage, consider collecting a mix of leaves, branches, berries, and even pinecones. Here are some elements to include:
Leaves: Maples, oaks, and varities of plum and ornamental fruit trees offer stunning colors and unique shapes.
Branches: Twigs and branches can serve as natural decor, adding height and texture to arrangements.
Berries: Bright red or orange berries from plants like bittersweet, holly or winterberry can add pops of color.
Grasses: Karl Foerster, Blue Grama Grass and other grasses can lend a nice ethereal touch. Even types of tumble weed can present itself as interesting material.
Acorns and Pinecones: These natural elements can enhance your autumn display with their earthy tones.
Styling with Fall Foliage
foraged fall branches make a lovely arrangement on their own
Once you’ve gathered your bounty, it’s time to get creative! Here are some ideas for incorporating your foraged finds into your home decor:
1. Nature-Inspired Centerpieces
Create a stunning centerpiece for your dining table using a mix of leaves, branches, and berries. Use a simple vase or even a rustic bowl to showcase your collection. Add candles for warmth and ambiance.
2. Wreaths and Garlands
Craft a beautiful wreath or garland for your front door or mantel. Use a base of twigs or wire, and attach your foliage using floral wire or twine. This not only welcomes guests but also brings the outdoors in.
3. Table Settings
Incorporate leaves and small branches into your table settings. Use them as place cards, or scatter them across the table for a rustic, woodland feel. Pair with seasonal candles and earthy dishware for a cohesive look.
4. Wall Art
Press leaves between heavy books to create natural art. Once dry, frame them or use them as part of a larger gallery wall. This adds a personal touch and serves as a reminder of your foraging adventure.
5. Seasonal Displays
Create a dedicated fall display on a shelf or side table. Combine your foliage with pumpkins, candles, and other autumnal decor for a festive vibe.
Final Thoughts
Foraging for fall foliage is not just about decorating your home; it’s about experiencing the season in a deeper, more meaningful way. As you gather and arrange, you’re creating not just decor, but memories of time spent outdoors. So, grab your basket, embrace the beauty of autumn, and let your creativity flow! Happy foraging!
2025 Design Trend Digest
2025 Interior Design Trends
Forecasting interior design trends in the year ahead
The Continuing Influence of Scandinavian-Japandi Fusion
In 2025, interior design will continue to embrace a serene, minimalist aesthetic that blends Scandinavian simplicity with the warm, natural elements of Japandi style. This stylistic blend creates a simply elegant and naturalistic space.
Warm Modern Minimalism
Say no more to stark, cold minimalistic spaces. The new minimalism brings warmth and nature to indoor spaces, achieved through natural materials like wood, stone, and organic textiles. The use of natural stone—from countertops to accent walls— adds texture while soft, neutral palettes create an opening and inviting atmosphere, the calm of the neutral palettes help soften the contrast of rich wood statement pieces like wooden doors, ceiling beams, and cabinets that can add a luxurious feel.
Bringing the Outdoors In
One of the most refreshing trends that we will continue to see in 2025 is the seamless incorporation of nature into interior spaces. indoor plants, art featuring organic shapes, and natural tones as integral design elements. Spaces are becoming more connected to the outdoors with patios that extend directly from the living room, blurring the boundaries between inside and outside. These extensions make outdoor spaces feel like an intrinsic part of the home, adding both relaxation and functionality. This Scandinavian-Japandi fusion emphasizes sustainability, simplicity, and warmth, making it easy to incorporate in any space.
An Evolution of Textured and Organic Surfaces & Spaces
In 2025, we will play with texture and the manipulation of lighting to continue to bring the element of nature into our indoor spaces. A key trend this year will be using materials and shapes that evoke warmth and depth while still maintaining a minimalist, clean foundational palette.
In 2025 texture takes center stage in defining space and style
Textured Walls & Ceilings
Textural details are making a bold comeback with textured walls and ceilings. From ceiling beams to intricate trim, these features add a traditional elegance and richness to otherwise minimalist spaces.Rounded & Softened Edges
Designers are softening spaces by incorporating rounded edges into doors, windows, chairs, bathtubs, and hallway entries, Just about anything you can imagine. These smooth, organic forms offer an inviting and calming contrast to the sharp lines of traditional modernism.Fluting for Dimension
A—grooved surfaces that can be applied to wood, metal, glass, and stone. Whether on cabinet doors, vanity countertops, or glass shower doors, fluting brings subtle texture and adds character to even the most minimal designs.Incorporating Glass Blocks
Another standout texture is the use of glass blocks, a nod to vintage design trends that’s making a comeback with modern flair. Glass blocks offer a unique way to introduce pattern and light diffusion, blending retro aesthetics with sleek, contemporary design.Fractals in Design
Lastly, fractals, geometric patterns found in nature, are being featured in everything from wallpaper and lighting to statement art pieces. This is a fun way to incorporate art into spaces in a nontraditional way. These patterns tap into the organic, nature-inspired trends while adding visual interest and energy to spaces.
Our forecast is that these approaches in highlighting and employing textured organic applications will define design in 2025 - blending modern trends with natural materials to create spaces that are equally visually captivating and sensory comforting.
- By Bohème Design House intern Amanda Whidden
2024 Interior Design Trend Forecast
Forecasting interior design trends for 2024 and beyond
Forecasting design trends for the year ahead
Quiet Luxury
What is quiet luxury in interior design? Quiet luxury interior design is about creating a harmonious environment where each element is thoughtfully considered and contributes to a sense of well-being and understated sophistication.
How does quiet luxury manifest itself in our homes, exactly? This shows up as a continuous foundation with an emphasis on classic, investment pieces that you can build a room around and upon. White oak or a rich darker wood paired with luxurious soft textures, and traditionally shaped furniture that can evolve through the decades with re-upholstery.
Japandi / Scandinese Style as a rooted foundation
Often a foundation of “quiet luxury” but also timelessly transcending trends that come and go is the relationship between Japanese minimalism and the natural earthy simplicity of Scandic style. “Both Japanese and Scandinavian design aesthetics are focused on simplicity, natural elements, comfort, and sustainability.”
A big aspect of Japanese design style, as well at the root of Scandinavian design although emphasized more so as the concept of hygge. “Wabi-sabi originated in China, but evolved seven hundred years ago into a Japanese ideal,” writes says Laila Rietbergen, the author of Japandi Living (Lannoo Publishers 2022). “It embraces the beauty of imperfection and being at peace with the imperfections of the world.”
We continue to see more and more of this design style as a foundation and basis of overall design. However, this is also our signature style in which we operate centrally from… working with earthy neutral & natural color palettes as the foundation of most of designs. Add on some Hygge decor to a central foundation of white walls and warm neutrals to create a calming canvas. Japandi and Scandinese style, as well, as hygge is marked by focal elements and accents that emphasize natural elements such as wood, bamboo and plants.
Eco / Sustainable Building + Design
Sustainable interior design is environmentally conscious with an emphasis on reducing waste, toxins and harmful manufacturing and material extraction practices, increasing recycled, natural materials and supporting practices and companies that are certified sustainable. Environmentally centered design reduces negative impacts on the environment, while increasing the health and comfort of inhabitants.
New construction offers opportunities for interior designers to build eco-friendly designs from scratch, using energy saving designs and recycled building materials. Energy and thermal modelling can be used to make a building more comfortable by improving energy efficiency, while increased indoor air quality can be found by improving passive heating, cooling and ventilation design. Interior designers taking into account the amount of natural light available to internal spaces in the home can reduce the requirement for electrical lighting. This type of research is crucial to the design of a green building.
Eco-style home design is one of the most attractive and harmonious trends. Using natural, eco-friendly materials and neutral hues, and finishing with simplicity and a minimalist approach, helps create spacious, bright, and convenient living spaces that are eco-friendly, pleasant, and comfortable.
Here are some design tips on how to incorporate sustainability and a more eco-minded approach to interior design
Responsible Product Sourcing: When purchasing products, you would naturally prefer to buy from companies that share your values, and when it comes being eco friendly and environmentally responsible, choosing which products to purchase is important. Look local whenever you can to reduce pollution and waste associated with the shipping of products which can contribute significant pollution. Look for a B Corp Certified stamp to know you’re buying from a company certified at one of the highest levels of sustainability. Here are other certificatioons you can look for to feel good about what you’re supporting and bringing into your home:
The Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS)
Positive Luxury
1% for the Planet
Certified B Corporation
STANDARD 100 by OEKO-TEXÒ
Leaping Bunny
Rainforest Alliance Certified
The Green Business Bureau
Increasing environmentally conscious + sustainable building practices. Consider these central 4 areas of building green:
Increasing energy efficiency. Check out Four Corner’s Office for Resource Efficiancy and Energy Smart Colorado program and learn more about LEED certified homes. Check with your local utility providers for State supported energy efficiency rebates and incentives to save money as well.
Materials selected for building your home. Check out Green Building Supplies to learn more about specific materials - flooring, finishes, etc.
Increasing the efficiency of water usage both in and outside of your home. Always look for and try to incorporate products with the WaterSense certified label.
Improving air quality, which improves the health and productivity of your family. Considering both eco finishes, insulation products, building materials and how your home breathes overall is central to a healthy home. Avoidtoxic building products and finishes - flooring, paint, glues and then essentially the furniture and products you’re adding to your home. Along with proper ventilation and eco building materials, consider biophilic design into your interior design and styling with plants to help regulate temperature and circulate oxygen rich air.
Image & Art by Heidi Chowen
Interior Inspiration: Fireplace design as a focal point
Interior design inspiration in incorporating hygge style into fireplace design
Getting hygge with fireplace design
Fireplace design as your heart of the home
As December sets in and the winter solstice is around the corner, its officially cozy hygge season over here and we’re finding inspiration in beautiful fireplaces as the main focal point of a home - providing both function and aesthetic as a central anchoring of the social space.
Hygge is a Danish term defined as “a quality of cosiness and comfortable conviviality that engenders a feeling of contentment or well-being.”
The concept of hygge is central to our design aesthetic - a minimalistic style, embodying the feeling of being content while enjoying life’s simple pleasures.
5 Ways to Incorporate Hygge Decor into Your Home
Here are some design tips on how to incorporate hygge into your way of life year-round and embrace minimalistic design in your living space:
Soft textiles: Decorate with accessories like throw blankets, throw pillows, faux fur area rugs, or sheepskin-lined blankets to create a warm cocoon on a cold night.
Neutral color schemes: White walls or warm neutrals create a calming canvas. Hygge decor is marked by natural elements such as wood, bamboo, and plants.
Mood lighting: Set the tone with string lights for a diffused source of illumination. Hang them in the living room, dining room, or bedroom. Use minimal touc lamps to illuminate shelving or nook areas or airy pendants hanging over cozy lounge areas. Incorporating a fireplace glow if possible is always a sure bet in adding ambiance, a sense of cozy and the most romantic of mood lighting.
Comforting scents: There’s a reason realtors suggest baking cookies before an open house—the familiar scent of a childhood home creates a cozy and welcoming environment. Instead of mixing up a batch of cookies, try scented candles. Warm aromas like ginger, vanilla, cinnamon, or orange contribute to a relaxing atmosphere.
Reading nook: Adapt hygge style to your love of literature. Set up a comfy space in which you can enjoy a good book and a cup of coffee.
Here’s some of our current inspiration