Step by step
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Collect and dry off your autumn leaves. Then follow the guidance in the preparation section to press your leaves. It can take two to four weeks until they are fully dry and ready to use.
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Once your leaves are dried, it is time to make some bunting. Using a pencil and ruler, draw triangle shapes onto paper. Then cut them out using scissors.
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Use a hole punch to make holes at the top of your paper bunting shapes.
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Use glue and glue spreaders or paint brushes to stick your pressed leaves onto your bunting.
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Cut a length of string or thread and wind it through all of your bunting. Remember to space the bunting out along the length of string or thread. We find doubling up the string makes the bunting stronger. If you don’t want to punch holes in the bunting you could glue ribbon to each side as an alternative to string.
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Hang your bunting in a window or on a wall to display.
Why leaves change colour and fall in the autumn
Leaves are green throughout the spring and summer as they are filled with chlorophyll. Through photosynthesis, chlorophyll creates sugars that feed the leaves and tree, keeping them healthy.
In the autumn, temperatures get lower and there are less hours of sunlight. This reduces photosynthesis and chlorophyll in the leaves allowing the wonderful autumn colours to shine through. The yellow and orange leaf colours are caused by a chemical called carotenoids, this is in leaves all year round but the stripping away of the chlorophyll allows it to show in the leaves.
Trees that have red and purple leaves in the autumn are even more special. These trees have a chemical called anthocyanin in them that builds up in especially dry and sunny weather, when there is concentrated sugars in the leaves. So when the chlorophyll becomes reduced in the autumn, these anthocyanins get to show off their vivid reds and purples, making for a stunning autumn display.
As the leaves change colour, this is the tree absorbing all the sugars and nutrients it can from them, allowing it to get ready for the winter ahead. Once the tree has done this through a process called abscission, the leaves will start to fall off.
This process starts when the leaf is just a bud and a chemical called auxin creates a join between the leaf stalk and the tree stem. As the weather changes in the autumn months, there is less auxin produced in the tree, this helps break this join. Then through abscission, the leaf will break off and fall to the ground.