Take a ride on Coney Island's Wonder Wheel, made with a reused bicycle wheel; paper and fabric trim.

A tribute to Mets star first basemen and Rookie of the Year Pete "Polar Bear" Alonso.

Pieces of water balloons collected from parks in Queens. One thing is for sure.

You can say a lot, with a wreath.

"There's new rules and there's no limits really to people's creativity," said Elizabeth Masella, Senior Public Art Coordinator, NYC Parks.

And there are 40 examples of that creativity in the Wreath Interpretations show at the Parks Department's Arsenal Gallery in Central Park. It's the 37th year for the wreath display, where traditional and unusual materials are used to make them.

Parks Department Senior Public Art Coordinator Elizabeth Masella says they had upwards of 80 entries to choose from, so it wasn't easy.  

"The weirder the better we find, we really want people to think outside the box," said Masella.

How about a candy wreath? One made from bubble wrap. This artist wasn't just horsing around with this one, made from cardboard, grasses and flowers.

Here's a stained glass Santa Claus.

Artist Leenda Bonilla of The Bronx made this wreath with her husband Luis Pagan with used foil packages of Café Bustelo Coffee, which she had been collecting for years.   

"I was actually in the process of just sorting out our studio and I found my bag of Bustelos and I said, I am going to make the wreath," said Artist Leenda Bonilla.

Which is a tribute to Bonilla growing up in a Puerto Rican family in The Bronx, where Christmas was big, and coffee was an important part of everyday life.

"Being a Nuyorican growing up in the 80s you see that there's this kind of bi-cultural life that you are living,” said Bonilla.