Ah, spring. The birds are chirping, flowers are blooming, and the air smells sweet.
Seeing all these colors after a long, white winter makes me feel creative. That’s why I compiled this list of 35 Easter wreaths for the front door festivity! Check them out!
Contents
- 1 Build A Beautiful Bunny
- 2 Perhaps You’d Prefer A Bunny In Action?
- 3 Rabbits Not Your Thing? Check Out These Elegant Egg Easter Wreaths
- 4 How About Some Flower Power?
- 5 You Can Also Hang Bouquets In Containers
- 6 Into Upcycling? Check Out These Easter Wreaths
- 7 Prefer To Keep Easter Holy? Include A Cross
- 8 Now You’ve Seen 35 Easter Wreaths For Front Door Festivity!
Build A Beautiful Bunny
Make A Bunny Easter Wreath As Lively As Spring Itself
You don’t need to be a master artist to make a wicker bunny. I love figure-8 bunny designs because they’re as easy to make as they are adorable.
I like this one, in particular, because of its liveliness. Thanks to its large center ribbons, this Easter wreath appears to literally burst with gorgeous green and bubblegum pink.
Or If You Prefer, Make It Down-To-Earth
This Easter wreath features a humble color scheme and earthy feel.
The blue-striped ribbons and puffs of cotton remind me of clouds lazily drifting through the sky. The sprawling leaves quietly emerge from behind the ribbons like they’re coming out of hibernation.
Make It As Soft As A Real Bunny
This one is great if you have kids.
Sure, kids can enjoy the natural wonders of springtime, but what is picking flowers compared to finding candy-filled eggs? The Easter Bunny is basically the Santa Clause of spring. Make this design to show him that he has fans!
The design looks kind of yummy. The colorful spots remind me of jellybeans or malt chocolate eggs.
Perhaps You’d Prefer A Bunny In Action?
Put Her In A Forest Of Foliage
This design appears to show a rabbit on a journey. The dark green foliage that surrounds her creates an impression of a shady forest. Notice how the different plants add to the wild look.
The rabbit looks alert and inquisitive. Perhaps she heard something with her big bunny ears, or maybe she’s foraging for more carrots? Let’s hope there are no foxes hiding in the brush!
Make An Abstract Scene
This design is neat because it’s abstract. You might see one thing and someone else might see something completely different. The rabbits just barely make this look Easter-related.
The arch and shredded paper beneath it makes me think of a rainbow sitting on a cloud, but with the colors reversed. Are the rabbits looking at me or at the rainbow?
Give Your Bunny A Place To Hide
Hide, Peter Cottontail!
This Easter wreath is a lot of fun. Not only does it look like the rabbit is hopping through it, but if you look closely, you can see things hiding among the ribbons.
The carrots are easy to identify… And I think I see a potato near his left shoulder?
Show Him Relaxing
This one’s adorable, if you ask me.
The rabbit looks as proud as he does look relaxed. He’s clearly a farmer, considering his straw hat and overalls. That carrot must be the biggest one he’s ever grown!
Make Your Bunny Jump Through A Hoop
Besides the lack of overalls on this bunny, there’s another important difference between this Easter wreath and the similar one before it.
Notice that this rabbit’s ears appear on the other side of the ribbons, as though he’s jumping through a hoop. The other rabbit’s ears looked like they were surrounded by ribbons, creating the impression that he was leaping into a bush.
Have Her Say Happy Easter
This tidy and simple design is great if you don’t have time to make something more elaborate (or don’t want to). Just bunch up some burlap around a circular frame, glue on the decorations, and voilà.
I love how the colorful items on this Easter wreath stand out against the brown burlap. The contrast makes the eggs look all the more like candy.
Put A Smile On His Face
This design is especially fun for kids.
With his colorful artificial Easter eggs, pink Easter grass, and snazzy bowtie, the rabbit on this Easter wreath is definitely the Easter Bunny!
I find this wreath especially uplifting because the rabbit is smiling, whereas most of the rabbits on this list are blank-faced or faceless.
Have Bunnies And Chicks Stand In A Circle
This is the only Easter wreath on this list that tastes good, although you’re not supposed to eat it.
Along with chocolate bunnies, jelly beans, and Cadbury Creme Eggs, marshmallow Peeps are an Easter candy tradition. String a few into a wreath and leave no doubt that you’re excited for Easter!
Rabbits Not Your Thing? Check Out These Elegant Egg Easter Wreaths
Part-Wreath, Part-Bouquet
Transform a humble wicker wreath into a springtime masterpiece, with multi-textured foliage, sherbert-colored eggs, and a large flower for the focal point.
It’s neat how the eggs on this Easter wreath work like flowers to compliment the large yellow one. If you blur your eyes, they look almost like unopened tulips.
This One’s Almost All Eggs
This Easter wreath is all eggs, save for the leaves that make it remind me of a laurel crown.
Whereas most of the other eggs on this list clearly look like eggs, the ones on this Easter egg wreath are a little different. Some of them have a threaded texture and others kind of look like painted walnut shells.
So Is This Minimalistic One
Here’s another fun, colorful Easter wreath that kids will love.
I think the green pipe cleaners are supposed to be stems and leaves. I might add some flowers to make this more obvious, but this wreath is still beautiful the way it is.
This Wreath Looks Like A Tumbleweed
Here’s another design of an Easter egg wreath that’s nice to just stare at for a while.
You can tell by their colors that the eggs on this Easter wreath aren’t real, and yet, the colors look natural because they aren’t saturated. They make the eggs pop out just enough from the green foliage and white flowers.
This design also has an illusion of motion. The wiry stems on this wreath make it resemble a rolling tumbleweed.
How About Some Flower Power?
Create Contrast Between The Flowers And Foliage
The beauty of this Easter wreath is the contrast between the top and lower halves. The flowers almost look like they’re glowing, compared to the dark green foliage. It’s such a simple look to pull off, too.
While the planters aren’t part of the wreath, itself, they do a nice job of accentuating it.
For A Lenten Look, Go With Purple
Due to its dark color scheme, this Easter wreath gives off a completely different vibe from the others on this list. I feel like it has a calming effect.
If you observe Lent, which features purple as its traditional color, this wreath is a fun way to show your enthusiasm. Of course, it’s also a way to share your love of the color purple!
Earth Colors Are Always Nice
Here’s another Easter wreath with a mostly dark color scheme. The green and brown give it an earthy vibe and make the white flowers really pop.
If you look closely, you can see that the white flowers and the green flowers beneath them look similar in size and shape. Together, the two clusters create a pleasant duality of light and dark.
So Are Sunflowers
I find this Easter wreath very uplifting, due to its sunny yellow and soothing blue flowers. The bare side on the right is hardly noticeable next to the radiance on the left!
Sunflowers are more traditional for summer than spring, but who cares? This wreath is bound to make people smile, regardless of the season.
This One Has The Farmhouse Look
If a wreath could be cozy, this would be it. This one looks so warm and inviting that you just know there’s a loving home behind the door.
The subtle blue ribbons and wooden welcome sign gives this Easter wreath a farmhouse feel. Meanwhile, the flowers, ladybugs, and foliage definitely give it some spring liveliness!
Look, A Ladybug!
Spring colors come in all forms. Flowers hog most of the attention, but insects add to the natural parade as they crawl out of hibernation.
Everything about this Easter wreath is cute. It has cute black, red, and white ribbons, cute little flowers, and a handsome ladybug with antennae. It looks like it could fly off at any moment!
You Can Also Hang Bouquets In Containers
For Example, Here’s A Bouquet In A Box
Wreaths are nice, but there are other ways to decorate a door. This bouquet in a box will invite visitors to stop and smell the tulips before ringing the doorbell!
Look at the intense contrast between the vibrant tulips and gray box. Another nice touch is that the box looks antique, whereas the tulips look like they were picked yesterday.
Here’s An Umbrella Bouquet
You know what they say — April showers bring May flowers! What an adorable and clever way to illustrate this concept.
The tulips and umbrella are almost the same shade of pink, which makes them look like they belong together. And, if you look at the ribbon, it almost makes the umbrella and flowers look like a store-bought bouquet!
Last But Not Least, Here’s A Pail Of Posies
In the case of this arrangement, less is more. The humble metal pail and gray ribbon let the yellow tulips stand center-stage.
Besides being beautiful, the best part of this design is how easy it is to put together. You could arrange this at the store you bought the parts from and just hang it up when you get home.
Into Upcycling? Check Out These Easter Wreaths
Transform A Wheel
This Easter wreath is perfect for someone who likes gardening. The combination of camellias, watering can, and wooden wheel in this arrangement makes me think of a creaky wagon full of gardening supplies.
I like how it seems to imply that the watering can is watering the flowers on the left side of the wheel.
Or Some Old Music Sheets
I wouldn’t be surprised if this one were made by someone in a choir. If spring makes you want to sing, this Easter wreath is for you.
The music sheets look elegant here, simply because they represent music. They almost give the impression that this wreath is singing!
How About A Hat?
This Easter wreath would look as good on your head as it does on a door. What a clever use for an old sunhat.
Like the wagon wheel wreath, this one also gives off a gardening vibe. It’s as if the hat represents a gardener’s head and the flowers represent what they’re planning to grow.
A Frame Makes This One Picture-Perfect
What a lovely way to recycle an old picture frame. It makes the grassy wreath look like an Easter memory coming back to life!
Notice that the butterfly, bow, and some of the speckled eggs are the same pink, while the frame and rest of the eggs are the same blue. The color coordination on this Easter egg wreath keeps this piece from looking too noisy.
Here’s Another Upcycled Frame
When you use the frame idea, but have eggs hanging freely like this, you get a completely different vibe. The empty space helps the frame make a bolder statement.
This Easter egg wreath piece reminds me of water because it has a lot of blue and the eggs look like raindrops.
And Another
This arrangement is very similar to the previous one, but with a noticeable lack of blue. The thick white frame seems to tame the energy of the colorful Easter eggs and ribbons inside it.
Both the ribbons and frame on this one are also thicker, which makes them look more integrated.
Prefer To Keep Easter Holy? Include A Cross
For A Quick Project, Combine Some Sticks And Easter Lilies
Simple yet elegant, this cross is just some sticks and lilies. Because it’s cheap to make and easy to take with you, this would make a fun Sunday school or after-church project.
This design has some nice symbolism, too. Christians believe that Jesus died so the sins of humanity could be forgiven. The open lily blossoms can signify flourishing spirituality and white represents purification.
If You Have A Little More Time, This One’s Also Simple
This design has similar symbolism to the previous one, but a completely different look. It would take longer to make and cost more money, but isn’t it just gorgeous?
There’s a pleasing balance between the cross, burlap bow, and cluster of Easter lilies. The bow also adds to the symbolism — it’s something you’d put on a gift.
You Might Like This Circular Look
Hallelujah! Heavenly white flowers and a rustic wooden cross make this Easter wreath look pure and holy.
Something I like about this design is how the items attached to the wreath base accentuate its roundness.
The foliage also appears to flow outward from the cross like a jet stream, or perhaps it’s like a comet’s tail following the cross. You could interpret this to mean something, but I just think it’s elegant.
Or This Blue And Brown Design
This Easter wreath is a blessed fusion of heavenly blue and earthly brown, which could symbolize humanity’s new ability to go to heaven after the crucifixion. Of course, it’s also a pretty color scheme.
The cross on this wreath is different from the others on this list in two ways — it’s very ornate and it’s right in the wreath’s center.
This One Preaches
Isn’t this Easter wreath just divine? The clusters of white flower petals look like heavenly clouds and the small flowers with long stems remind me of fireworks.
What makes this wreath stand out from the other religious Easter wreath ideas, in my opinion, is its enthusiasm. The cross actually states, “He is risen”, instead of merely implying it.
Now You’ve Seen 35 Easter Wreaths For Front Door Festivity!
When spring brings you flowers and butterflies, it just feels right to make something beautiful of your own.
Did my list of 35 Easter wreath ideas for front door festivity inspire you? If so, share it with your friends!
Want even more spring decorating ideas? You may enjoy my list of Easter front porch decorating ideas as well as this post with Easter trees. And if you are dreaming of Easter during winter, try to add some festive spirit to your porch by implementing one of these ideas.
If you happen to need these ideas to prep your house for sale, check out my ultimate guide where I talk about 150+ curb appeal ideas.
The two bunny butt wreaths are from China, do an image search. There are tons on them on ebay, from Aliexpress.
The bunny butts may have been made in China. However the wreath was designed right here in NC