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How To Make A Crepe Paper Tropical Leaf Plant For A Wall Vase

Inside: An easy tutorial for a DIY crepe paper tropical leaf plant and an idea for an upcycled wall vase to display it in.

The other day, I broke another one of my favourite Anthropologie mugs. It was a lucky break, as it broke in half. Instead of binning the mug, I upcycled it into a DIY wall vase.

Even though I could repurpose the mug into a wall vase, it was only really suited for faux plants and flowers. As the mug had a Boho vibe, I decided a tropical leaf plant would look the best in the vase.

I’ve made faux felt succulents and crepe paper flower wall displays before. I thought crepe paper would be the best way to make the DIY tropical leaf plant this time.

You can make pretty realistic-looking faux flowers and plants with crepe paper. It can be moulded and shaped mainly using thick Italian crepe paper.

I designed this tropical leaf plant myself, and I’m not sure what plant it is, but I think the leaves look very similar to banana leaves.

Boho DIY tropical leaf plant in an upcycled Anthropologie mug

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What You Need

What you need

How to make a Crepe Paper Tropical Leaf Plant

These tropical leaves resemble those of Bird’s Nest ferns, as shown in this fern drawing tutorial.

Step 1: To make the first leaf, cut a piece of crepe paper into a rectangle approximately 7cm by 12cm (3″ by 5″). Then another strip is 1 cm by 12 cm (1/2″ by 5″).

Top Tip: Make sure that the grain of the crepe paper runs in the right direction. Follow the picture above. The crepe paper folds should lie where the paper would get longer when pulled.

Step 2: Next, stretch out the long thin piece of crepe paper. Glue one end to the top of the wire stem. Then tightly wrap the crepe paper around the wire stem. Use another glue dollop to secure the paper strip’s end to the wire.

stretched out strip of crepe pape
wrapping the stem

Step 3: Place glue down the centre of the large crepe paper rectangle. Then, stick the wrapped wire stem to it.

Gluing in the wire stem

Step 4: Then, half the crepe paper around the stem. Cut out a leaf shape whilst the crepe paper is folded around the stem.

folding the leaf
cutting the leaf shape

Step 5: Fold out the crepe paper to reveal the leaf shape. Then, use the sharpie to add tinting to the edge of the tropical leaf.

tinting the leaf edge

Step 6: Next, cut out random small nicks and cut them into the leaf’s edge.

Step 7: The best bit about using this heavy crepe paper is that it can be bent and shaped. Manipulate the crepe paper on the leaf to bend and shape it into a more realistic tropical leaf shape.

shaping the DIY tropical leaf

Step 8: Repeat steps one to seven to make at least 5 DIY tropical leaves. I suggest slightly varying the leaves’ sizes to create a more natural plant.

DIY tropical leaf plant

Step 9: Finally, to finish the DIY tropical plant, place the foam in the mug Boho wall vase and arrange the leaves. The wire stem and the flexibility of the crepe paper enable you to shape the plant to look more realistic.

DIY tropical leaf plant for an upcycled wall vase
DIY tropical leaf plant in wall vase

Check out these other teacup craft ideas.

There is a tutorial on felt tropical leaves with this DIY felt lampshade.

If you like me and love the Boho look in home interiors, check out these excellent vintage tropical palm tree prints.

I’ve also made an upcycled leather Boho vase with giant crepe paper flowers and Boho jeans pillows that complement this craft. These DIY tropical leaf plants look great in recycled hanging planters or other upcycled vases.

You can find more fun papercrafts here.

20 DIY Wall Décor Ideas for Your Living Room - Joyful Derivatives

Tuesday 25th of January 2022

[…] 20. Tropical Leaf Plant Wall Vase […]

Julie

Saturday 9th of May 2020

These look fabulous! Why is always the nice mugs that get broken rather than the cheap supermarket ones - or those faded ones that came with an Easter egg back in the 70's!! Great that you could save this beauty and give it a new life.

Claire Armstrong

Saturday 9th of May 2020

Thank you, Julie. The other mugs do get broken rather easily, (almost accidentally on purpose especially those horrible Easter egg ones) but thrown straight in the bin. Not everything is worth upcycling.

Michelle Leslie

Monday 4th of May 2020

What a fun idea and they look so close to the real thing too. Sorry you broke your fav Anthropologie mug. She's pretty cool too and I love the way you've saved her.

Claire Armstrong

Monday 4th of May 2020

Thank you, Michelle. Lucky I have a few more Anthro mugs to fall back on, I have a bit of a week spot when it comes to nice mugs.