Start making your bow by taking the 2.5-inch ribbon and making a 5.5-inch loop with an 18-inch tail. Pinch, twist, and make a matching loop and tail. Take a pipe cleaner and wrap it through the middle, twisting it to hold your bow in place while you work on the next ribbon.Make a 15-inch tail with a 5-inch loop with the 1.5-inch natural white gingham ribbon. Pinch, twist, and repeat until you have 4 loops total and a second tail.Take your bow, remove the pipe cleaner, and add this part on top. Then use the pipe cleaner to hold it in place while you work on the last piece.Make a slightly smaller 4-inch single loop with two 15-inch tails with your 1.5-inch burlap-colored ribbon.Grab your bow, remove the pipe cleaner, and add this last loop on top. Use your pipe cleaner to wrap around through the middle and twist tightly.Attach your bow to the grapevine base by pushing the pipe cleaners through the grapevine to hide the pipe cleaners. Twist the pipe cleaner in the back of the grapevine then tuck the ends back into the grapevine to hide them.
Separate your greenery sprigs and use bolt cutters to clip off the smaller sprigs from the larger bunch. Then, starting from the bottom of the bow, insert pieces of greenery into the grapevine one at a time as you move closer to the bow. Add a dab of hot glue to the stem of each greenery piece to secure it.
Repeat the same process of adding greenery sprigs on the other side of the bow and securing each one with hot glue.
Use bolt cutters to separate pieces of your greenery with the tiny white blooms on it. Layer in pieces throughout your other greenery pieces and secure each on with a dab of hot glue.
Use your bolt cutters to separate the eucalyptus greenery sprigs to cut off a few smaller pieces to layer into your greenery on the grapevine. Secure each stem with a dab of hot glue.