Cinematic overhead shot of a rustic wooden craft table with spring DIY projects, including mason jars with forsythia branches, colorful fabric flower petals, painted terracotta pots, book page birds, pom-pom trim ribbon, lavender candles, and vintage wooden spoons, all illuminated by warm golden hour light.

DIY Spring Decor: Budget-Friendly Projects and Ideas

DIY Spring Decor: Budget-Friendly Projects and Ideas

DIY spring decor doesn’t require a shopping spree at expensive home stores or a degree in interior design. I’ve spent years transforming my home with the seasons, and spring is hands-down my favorite time to get creative.

Why?

Because you can make stunning pieces from what’s already sitting in your garage, stuffed in kitchen drawers, or waiting at the local thrift shop for a dollar or two.

Let me show you exactly how I refresh my entire house each spring without breaking the bank.

A rustic farmhouse entryway bathed in warm, soft light, featuring distressed white windows, cream ceramic vases with cherry blossoms, an antique side table, botanical prints, and a cozy ambiance.

Stop Shopping and Start Looking: Projects Using What You Already Own

Walk through your house right now. Seriously, take a lap. You’re sitting on a goldmine of spring decor materials, and you don’t even know it.

Raid Your Bookshelves and Junk Drawers

Last March, I was about to donate a stack of yellowed paperbacks when inspiration struck. Those pages became the most gorgeous book page wreath I’ve ever made—better than anything I’d seen at Pottery Barn for eighty bucks.

Here’s what I grabbed from around my house:

  • Old books – tear out pages and fold them into bird shapes or flowers
  • Mason jars from the pantry – fill with water and fresh-cut branches from the yard
  • Forgotten picture frames – paint them white and fill with pressed flowers or fabric
  • Kitchen utensils – yes, I framed vintage wooden spoons and it looks intentionally quirky
  • Vintage windows from the garage – lean against walls and add faux greenery garlands

The mason jar trick is my go-to when people are coming over. I grab three or four jars, fill them with water, and stick in whatever’s blooming outside—forsythia, cherry blossoms, even interesting bare branches. Line them up on the mantel and boom—instant spring vibes for exactly zero dollars.

Bright sunlit living room corner showcasing a handmade fabric flower arrangement in mason jars and glass bottles, with a distressed white wooden shelf adorned with burlap ribbon and vintage book page birds. A large vintage window and faux greenery garland enhance the soft natural light, illuminating a handwoven throw pillow and rustic terracotta pots. Soft focus and warm lighting accentuate the organic textures and spring colors.

Fabric Scraps Are Spring Gold

My craft closet looks like a fabric store exploded in it. Instead of feeling guilty about it, I finally put those scraps to work.

The pom-pom pillow project changed my living room in under an hour:

  • Grabbed old throw pillows that looked tired
  • Hot-glued colorful pom-pom trim around the edges
  • Suddenly had “new” pillows that guests complimented constantly

Fabric flower tutorial (the easiest thing you’ll make this year):

  1. Cut circles from fabric scraps in springy colors
  2. Fold each circle in half, then in half again
  3. Hot glue the pointed end together
  4. Attach to a stem (I use floral wire or even painted twigs)
  5. Stick them in a vase and accept compliments

I also discovered that burlap ribbon I bought three years ago “just in case” makes stunning bows for literally everything. Tie them around vases, picture frames, or the back of dining chairs for instant farmhouse-spring charm.

DIY Projects That Look Expensive But Cost Pocket Change

Some projects require buying a few things, but we’re talking dollars, not hundreds. These are the ones I make every single spring because they’re foolproof and impressive.

Mason Jar Everything (Because It Works)

I make lavender-scented candles in mason jars every April. The process takes maybe thirty minutes:

  • Melt wax (I buy the cheapest stuff)
  • Add lavender essential oil
  • Pour into clean mason jars with wicks
  • Let them set overnight

People think I’m fancy. I’ve spent maybe two dollars per candle.

Cozy craft room featuring a soft white wooden desk scattered with fabric scraps, framed vintage wooden spoons, an open mason jar of forsythia branches, and colorful DIY birdhouse kit. The space is illuminated by natural light, with artfully arranged craft supplies like a hot glue gun, ribbon spools, and handmade lavender candles, all set against a textured linen backdrop in muted spring tones with metallic gold accents.

The Terracotta Pot Glow-Up

Plain terracotta pots are ugly. There, I said it. But paint them? Total transformation.

My favorite techniques:

  • Dry brushing – dip brush in white paint, wipe most of it off, lightly brush over the pot for a weathered look
  • Ombré effect – start with dark spring color at bottom, gradually lighten as you move up
  • Stenciled designs – grab a decorative stencil set and add patterns

I did this with beer bottles too (after drinking the beer, obviously). Spray painted them soft pink and robin’s egg blue, filled them with single stems, and lined them up on the windowsill. My sister asked where I bought them. Victory.

Farmhouse kitchen windowsill adorned with upcycled, spray-painted beer bottles holding single stem flowers, complemented by a vintage lace curtain valance and soft morning light. A wooden cutting board displays fresh herbs, while a ceramic bird nest with wooden eggs adds charm. Distressed white wooden shelves showcase layered textures of moss, ribbon, and metallic accents, all captured in soft focus with warm natural lighting.

Bring Birds Into Your Decor (Without the Mess)

I’m obsessed with DIY birdhouse kits because they’re basically spring in physical form. You can paint them any color, weather them with sandpaper, and either hang them outside or use them as shelf decor inside.

I also make bird nests for my spring tablescape:

  • Buy moss from the dollar store
  • Shape it into a nest form
  • Tuck in small wooden or plastic eggs
  • Add a ribbon bow
  • Place in vintage metal containers or envelope-shaped wall pockets

It’s cottage-core perfection without the cottage-core price tag.

Thrift Stores Are Your Spring Decor Treasure Hunt

I hit thrift stores every other week. Not because I need stuff, but because the hunt is half the fun. And the spring decor possibilities are absolutely ridiculous.

What I Always Look For
  • Valances and curtain rods – I found three floral valances last year for four bucks each. They weren’t even

    This post may contain affiliate links. Please see my disclosure policy for details.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *