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Flower and Leaf Preservation

This arts & crafts project preserves nature and is a perfect activity for spring or fall.
Updated: December 1, 2022

Flower and Leaf Preservation

Time: One hour or more

Materials needed:

  • Old phone book
  • Collection of colorful leaves, grasses, flowers, herbs
  • Craft glue
  • Plain note cards/postcards/watercolor paper
Take a nature walk with on a clear, dry day. Collect any attractive flowers, leaves, grasses, and herbs. At home, separate each stalk or blossom, and place between the pages of the phone book. Use a different page for each specimen, spacing them well apart from each other.

Place the phone book in a cool, dry place for a week to ten days. Your leaves will then be totally dry and ready for use.

Carefully apply craft glue, just a dab, to the back of your dried leaf or flower. Center it on a note card for a single design or place several as a collage on a sheet of watercolor paper, which can later be framed.

Your phone book/leaf press can be used over and over again. Flowers may be stored in them for several months.

Did You Know?

In Victorian times people planted decorative gardens and often preserved their herbs and flowers in a leaf press. Certain flowers were thought to mean certain things: rosemary for remembrance; roses for undying love; lavender for devotion; oak leaves for strength. A notecard that used the fragrant language of flowers conveyed more than words.

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