Make Your Own Wreath Workshops

Plastic Blingtastic workshops are relaxed, creative sessions where you’re guided to make your own ethical yet luxurious wreath using upcycled and reclaimed materials.

These are small-group workshops designed for enjoyment, creativity, and confidence — not perfection.

What to expect

  • A guided creative session lasting approximately 2.5 hours

  • All materials provided

  • A friendly, supportive environment

  • Your finished wreath to take home

No previous experience is needed — just curiosity and a willingness to play.

Based in TW13, London

Who these sessions are for

Workshops are ideal for:

  • Adults wanting a creative break

  • Mother and daughter days

  • Birthdays and celebrations

  • Couples

  • Hen do or small group activities

Please note: workshops are not suitable for children under 12.

Booking & practical details

Workshops take place in Hanworth, London.
Spaces are limited and must be booked in advance.

Payment is required to secure your place.
Full location and arrival details are shared once booking is confirmed.

'Things Men Have Made' By D.H Lawrence (1929)

'Things men have made with wakened hands

Are awake through years with transferred touch, and go on glowing

For long years

And for this reason, some old things are lovely

Warm, still, with the life of forgotten men who made them.'

And obviously, let's not forget women, Mr Lawrence!

The trail-blazing and taboo-smashing novelist, artist and poet D.H Lawrence wrote this poem nearly 100 years ago. Lawrence loved life, in all its forms, art styles and cultures.

Something of a trailblazing artist and rule-breaker himself, Lawrence celebrated the hand-made, the artisan's skills, the individually crafted.

I'm trying to enable today's discarded plastic and plush items, still not even 'old' or 'worn', to 'go on growing for long years' and remain 'lovely' - albeit in a different and blinged-up way- far beyond their original intended expiry dates.

I may be working with today's modern materials rather than oak and mahogany, but the aim is the same: crafted, bespoke, and unique, turning raw materials into something rich and strange.

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