DIY Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones (4 Easy Ways!)
Enjoy that warm cinnamon aroma that makes fall and the holiday season come alive by making your own DIY cinnamon scented pine cones for your home. It’s an easy project, and I’m even showing you four different (easy) ways to make them so you can skip the trip to your local craft store to buy them!
Do you know how that first whiff of cinnamon scented pine cones makes you feel every fall – warm and a little excited, with thoughts of crisp days, family gatherings, and holiday decorations?
Well, it always does that to me, too. And I think that feeling is even better when I make those special scented pine cones myself (instead of buying them at craft stores) and use them wherever we like to add a bit of that warm feeling to our home.
If you love to fill your home with that special cinnamon aroma, try making your own cinnamon-scented pine cones along with my festive snowflake Apple Cinnamon Dough Ornaments!
How To Make Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones 4 Different Ways
I’ve included 4 different ways for you to make scented pine cones at home so you can meet your own particular needs (allergies to fragrance chemicals, anyone?) and satisfy your own personal crafty interests at the same time.
Here’s a quick run down so you know what to look for:
- Essential Oils – easy and versatile because you can add your favorite holiday scent to your pine cones if you want something other than cinnamon
- Melted Wax – different, easy, fun
- Ground Cinnamon – the cinnamon scent is unbeatable
- Boiled Pine Cones With Cinnamon Sticks – instead of baking or gluing the scent on, soak it into the pine cones
Happily, scented pinecones are easy, kid-friendly, reasonably quick, and oh-so festive! The smell of cinnamon pine cones gets me in the holiday mood even more than Christmas tree lights do! 🎄
Where To Use Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones
- Homemade potpourri
- Centerpieces
- Home decorations
- Ornaments
- DIY gifts
1. Essential Oil-Infused Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones
If you really love cinnamon scented pinecones, I recommend this method because it provides a strong scent thanks to the warm and spicy fragrant oils.
Plus, it uses natural ingredients, and it’s a breeze to refresh the smell of the cinnamon pinecones when the scent (inevitably) fades by adding a few drops of oil.
NOTE: I also think this is the easiest way to make cinnamon pine cones – and they make your home smell amazing.
Materials You’ll Need
- Pine Cones
- Gallon sized zippered bags or other sealable container
- Cinnamon essential oil
- Orange essential oil
- Foil
- Cookie sheet
How to Make Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones Infused With Essential Oils
- Preheat oven to 200℉. Line a large cookie sheet with aluminum foil. Spread the pine cones evenly across the foil.
- Bake in the oven for 40 minutes. Remove and let cool completely. (little bugs and critters can be hiding in the pine cones, so baking them is a good way to keep the critters from spreading in your house)
- Once the pine cones are cooled, place them in a large sealable plastic bag. Add your essential oils to the pine cones. I used 10 drops of orange, and 10 drops of cinnamon. You can try different combinations until you get the desired scent you like.
- Seal the bag, and shake the pine cones around so that they absorb the oils. Remove excess air from the bag, and seal tightly.
- Place the bag in a cool dark place to set for one week. This will allow the oils to fully absorb into the pine cones, and provide you with the strongest lasting scent.
- Once they have set for a week, remove and place in a bowl for display.
2. Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones With Wax
Love melting wax? Here’s how to use this cinnamon scented pinecones recipe to make your favorite holiday scent explosion! This approach takes a little longer than the others, but it’s fun to do, and the scent lasts 2-3 months, like scented candles.
Materials You’ll Need
- Pine cones
- Foil
- Cookie baking sheet
- Candle wax
- Cinnamon candle scent
- Double boiler
- Glitter or other decorations you may want to add
- Plate, coaster, or some pretty base to protect your furniture from wax
How To Make Cinnamon Scented Pinecones With Melted Wax
Isn’t melting wax a fun activity? Well, put it to good use and have fun, too, with this method.
Step 1
If you collect pinecones yourself, you’ll probably want to go ahead and clean and debug first.
Step 2
Start the cleaning by soaking them for 10 minutes or so in warm water. Rinse well.
Step 3
Put them on a foil-lined cookie sheet and bake at 200 degrees for 30-45 minutes. When you take them out of the oven they should be dry and nicely opened out.
Step 4
If you have candle wax scraps left over, collect a good amount – enough to do 2 or 3 dippings of all the pine cones in your stash.
If buying wax, cheap candles from a dollar store work just fine. White wax tends to look like snow on the dried pine cones, but choose any color you like.
Step 5
Melt your wax in a double boiler – a large metal can (like a coffee can) placed inside a larger cooking pan of water works great and avoids any clean-up woes.
Add a few drops of cinnamon essential oil to the melted wax until it smells the way you want it too.
Step 6
Using tongs, dip each pine cone into the melted wax, making sure to get the wax all over the cone.
Remove the pine cones from the wax and set them upright on foil to harden. When the wax has hardened, after several minutes, you can re-dip. Do this 2 or 3 times to get the look you want.
Step 7
After the final dipping, if you want to add glitter or other decorations, do it while the wax is still wet.
Let the pine cones dry thoroughly. If you’d like an even bolder scent, just drop a bit more candle fragrance directly onto the cones.
Step 8
Set your waxed scented cinnamon pinecones on coasters or some other base anywhere around your house to release a surprising bit of scent wherever you like.
Note: If you have a wood-burning fireplace, these also make great fire starters and may release a bit of scent as they burn.
3. Ground Cinnamon Pine Cones
Have you ever thought of simply gluing ground cinnamon onto pine cones? It works!
The scent will not last as long as the waxed pine cones (probably about a week or so), but you can easily sprinkle on more cinnamon whenever you need it. And kids love to paint on the glue and sprinkle the cinnamon. 😉
Materials Needed
- Pine cones
- Foil or heavy paper
- Cookie sheet
- Craft Glue or Mod Podge
- Small Paint Brush
- Ground Cinnamon
- Plate, coaster, bowl – something to protect your furniture from any loose cinnamon
How To Make Scented Pinecones With Ground Cinnamon
- As always, clean and debug any materials collected from outside, just as described in the waxed pine cone directions.
- Use a small paintbrush to apply white craft glue or Mod Podge to your pine cones. This can be watered down a little if it seems easier. Get it on the “leaves” of the cone and down in the crevices. TIP: If you’re using a large cone, you might want to do it a section at a time so the glue doesn’t dry before adding cinnamon.
- With your glued-up pine cones standing upright on foil or paper, sprinkle cinnamon all over them.
- When the glue is dry, shake gently to get off excess cinnamon, and put your pine cones
on a plate or coaster or in a bowl or basket to have that wonderful cinnamon smell wherever you want it.
4. Boiling Pinecones With Cinnamon Sticks
The fragrance using this method lasts several days to a week, especially if you leave some cinnamon sticks sitting with the pine cones and rub the sticks together once or twice a day.
Materials Needed
- Pine Cones in varying sizes
- Gallon size sealable bag
- Cinnamon sticks
- Cinnamon essential oil
- Foil
- Large cookie sheet
How to Make Cinnamon Scented Pinecones Boiled With Cinnamon Sticks
- Simply put your pine cones, gathered or bought, in any good-sized pot. Add a cinnamon stick for every 2 smaller pine cones or 1 for every larger cone. Add enough water to cover the pine cones, and essential oils, and heat to a boil.
- Cover and boil for 5-10 minutes. Turn off the heat, leave the cover on and let them sit for 1-2 hours.
- Set the newly cinnamon scented pine cones out to dry on paper or foil and enjoy.
Rocky Mountain Oils – Essential Oils You Can Trust
I often get asked which brand. of essential oils I recommend, I want to take a moment to mention Rocky Mountain Oils.
When it comes to using essential oils, I ONLY recommend high-quality, independently tested pure essential oils. But they also have to be affordable (and not an MLM sales model).
Rocky Mountain Oils checks ALL the boxes. When you order their products, you can be assured you’re getting nothing but the best – at a terrific price!
Sure, you can buy various essential oils on Amazon or in your local store, but can you really trust the brand and the quality? Check out Rocky Mountain Oils!
NOTE: essential oils are different from fragrance oil.
FAQs: Tips For Making DIY Cinnamon Scented Pine Cones
Projects like this one often raise questions. Check to see if your questions about making cinnamon scented pine cones are answered below. If you don’t see yours, ask it in the comments section at the bottom of the post so I can answer it for you!
I think the best place is on a hike or in the backyard – using your own pine cones is free and you get to spend a little time outside! Otherwise, you can buy cleaned and ready-to-use pine cones in local stores and online in a variety of shapes and sizes.
Open or closed….both work. Don’t use green ones, though!
Soak them in warm water for 5-10 minutes. Then swish them around in the warm water to release any dirt and rinse.
Bake them in the oven for 30-45 minutes to make sure no little critters invade our home. Make sure to put aluminum foil under the pine cones to keep sap off your cookie sheet.
That depends on the method you use.
* Essential oil infused pine cones maintain their scent for about 2 weeks.
* Waxed pine cones tend to last the longest, just like regular scented candles. Two to three months is likely.
* Those made with ground cinnamon last about a week.
* Scented pinecones boiled with cinnamon sticks last several days to a week.
The pine cones themselves will last for years (and you can use them repeatedly, year after year!). However, the heavenly smell only stays strong for about 2 weeks. But good news – you can easily refresh the scent!
Once the smell fades on your scented pinecones, simply add a bit more of the original scent.
Sprinkling a few drops of essential oil or a few shakes of cinnamon directly onto the pine cones themselves will provide an instant refresh.
It won’t last terribly long, but it will smell wonderful, is easy to replicate, and you get the added benefits of diffused essential oils.
If you don’t want to keep your pine cones and use them again next year, one option is to burn them in your fireplace. You may see that they smoke a little more than other kindling at first, but then they will start to burn and will help to ignite larger pieces of wood.
They are safe to burn and you may even get a little bit of the residual scent, and they will leave no residue.
Stop stressing over the holidays and start planning (and having fun) with this free planner checklist!
Final Thoughts
I think it’s wonderful that any one of these quick and easy projects can be fun for both you and your kids. These heavenly cinnamon scented pine cones will continue to tickle the senses with their beauty and fragrance for as long as you wish to enjoy them!
More Holiday Inspiration
If you love these DIY scented pinecones, be sure to check out these other posts for holiday joy too!
- Must-Know Holiday Safety Tips Every Family Needs
- 7 Essential Ways to Avoid Overspending During the Holidays
- How To Prepare Your Home For Holiday Guests: 9 Hacks
- How to practice self care during the holidays
- The Importance and Joy of Family Holiday Traditions
Pin For Later!
DIY Cinnamon Scented Pinecones
Ingredients
- Pine Cones
- Gallon sized zippered bags or another sealable container
- Cinnamon essential oil
- Foil
- Cookie sheet
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 200℉ and line a large cookie sheet with foil.
- Spread the pine cones evenly across the foil. Bake in the oven for 40 minutes. Remove and let cool completely. (little bugs and critters can be hiding in the pine cones, so baking them is a good way to keep the critters from spreading in your house)
- Once the pine cones are cool, place them in a large gallon size sealable bag. Add your essential oils to the pine cones. I used 10 drops of orange, 8 drops of cinnamon, and 6 drops of stress away. You can try different combinations until you get the desired scent you like.
- Seal the bag, and shake the pine cones around so that they absorb the oils. Remove excess air from the bag, and seal tightly.
- Place the bag in a cool dark place to set for one week. This will allow the oils to fully absorb into the pine cones, and provide you with the strongest lasting scent.
- Once they have set for a week, remove and place in a bowl for display.
With the essential oil method, do you add the specified drops per pinecone or is that the total amount per bag?
Hi Chelsea! Well, that depends on how strongly you want them to smell. Personally, I would add that amount to the entire bag.
After reading your recipe I made it perfectly. Thanks
Terrific! I’m so glad they turned out well for you! Thanks for stopping by and then coming back to let me know!
I tried the boiled pine cones and they all closed really tight- has anyone else tried this with a better result?
Hi Heidi! They close up as they soak up the water, but then they open back up when they dry out. Your pinecones should be just fine when they dry 🙂
Thanks for this post. my granddaughter is 3 and loves collecting pine cones and crafts. I’m always hunting down scented pine cones
This looks so exciting. I can use it for holiday. Thank you for sharing!
This is a great idea! I have tons of pine cones in my backyard and essential oils.
This would be a great, fun project to do with my teens. I love making the house smell festive for the holidays and I also avoid unnatural fragrances.
These are so perfect for right now specially for the holidays
I pinned this earlier but wanted to come back to it! This weekend we plan on doing some fun crafts and making our own decorations so I cannot wait to try these!
Awww, thanks Jessica! They’re super fun – and smell sooooo good!
This is awesome! I have a centerpiece with pinecones in it that my daughter and I made a while ago. I am about to add cinnamon to them and do this right now!