{"title":"How to Make Moss Wall Art","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/how-to-make-moss-wall-art","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"HGTV Home","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCesXqJmu3vgiacty8CVlK5g","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUeO-5VMsyc"},"tldr":"Make lush moss wall art with plant stylist Hilton Carter. Layer preserved moss into a frame for green decor that never needs watering.","totalDurationSeconds":435,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["hot glue gun","box cutter or X-Acto knife","scissors","pencil","cutting mat"],"materials":["preserved sheet moss","preserved reindeer moss","foam board or cardboard","wood frame or shadow box","hot glue sticks","picture hangers"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Gather Your Supplies","text":"Start with a frame. Buy one, grab a thrift-store find, or pull down a piece of art you are over and reuse it. Then round up foam board or cardboard for the base, a hot glue gun with plenty of sticks, a sharp box cutter, scissors, and a pencil. The star of the show is the moss. Hilton uses both sheet moss and reindeer moss, and as he says, you can never have enough. It is all preserved, so it will not need watering once it is up."},{"number":2,"title":"Sketch Your Shapes","text":"Lay your board on a cutting mat and sketch out loose, wavy shapes with a pencil. You are planning where the layers will sit. Think of it like a landscape: flat plains along the bottom, ridges that bubble up toward the edges. Draw a few different pieces so you can stack them later and give the art some depth. Have fun with the edges here. There is no wrong shape, and the wilder the outline, the more natural the finished piece looks."},{"number":3,"title":"Cut Out the Pieces","text":"Take your box cutter and follow the pencil lines. A sharp blade is the whole game here. The sharper it is, the cleaner and easier the cut, so swap in a fresh blade if yours is dull. Work slowly around the curves and let the shape guide you. Hang on to every scrap you cut away too, because the leftover board gets tucked back into the piece later to fill gaps and add height."},{"number":4,"title":"Layer for Depth","text":"Bring in the frame and work on the back panel. Start arranging your cut pieces, stacking them so the shapes build up around the center. Hilton describes it as rolling hills: flat plains low, mountain ranges bubbling up at the edges. Move things around until you like the look. Once the arrangement feels right, jot down the order of your layers so you remember what goes where when you start gluing."},{"number":5,"title":"Glue the Moss Base","text":"Now the fun part. Flip a piece over, run nice big dollops of hot glue across the back, and press your sheet moss down hard so it grabs. Work layer by layer, following the order you wrote down. Do not stress about the edges around the sides. Those gaps get filled in with extra moss at the end, so a little overhang or bare spot now is completely fine."},{"number":6,"title":"Fill In With Moss","text":"With the base down, start filling every open spot. Glue in reindeer moss and mix your greens, from deep forest tones to that almost neon lime, to keep it looking alive. Squeeze moss into the seams and tuck it around the frame edges so no board shows through. Keep building and adding until the whole surface is a full, textured carpet of green with no bare patches left."},{"number":7,"title":"Hang and Enjoy","text":"That is it. Trim any stray bits with scissors, add picture hangers to the back, and lift your finished moss wall art up to admire it. The layered greens read like a lush little slice of the outdoors, framed and ready for any wall. Best of all, there is nothing left to do. No watering, no light, no upkeep. Hang it where it makes you smile and let it bring the jungle indoors."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-07-10T01:31:41.143Z","published":"2026-07-10T01:31:27.243Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}