Archive for 'holidays'

Christmas Gift Tips: Ways to Make An Affordable Gift Mean Additional

Are you currently in search of Christmas gift suggestions mainly because you want make your income go further this year? Do not be concerned. Quite a few people are in this similar situation inside the existing economic climate. Nobody will think worse of you inifou devote less money on your gifts, as long as you make them unique in some way.

In case you do not think that, just consider it for a moment. How typically have you been glad to receive a gift from somebody although the gift itself was not some thing that you seriously wanted? If it was chosen for you, or produced for you, or just produced unique in some way, it becomes a valuable present. It is the thought that counts, as the old saying goes!

Now, having said that, that a low-priced gift will not be appreciated unless it shows some imagination. Quite a few folks will delight in a quirky or enjoyable gift, regardless of how low-priced it was. But if you give them a cheap and boring grocery store shower gel, it’s going to not have exactly the same impact. Your gifts must be particular in some way if they’re going to pass the test.

In case you don’t have a whole lot to devote, one of the most effective solutions to make a gift special would be to have made it your self. You may most likely be surprised to find how effortless it really is, for example, to make candy, chocolates or Christmas cookies.

Should you be skilled at needlepoint or other crafts you have got most likely already designed some attractive gifts, but if not, there are still several items that you can do. Grandparents will love photographs of your children produced into bookmarks or calendars. For other household members, you can take into account customizing regular inexpensive CD holders or other items.

The second critical point to don’t forget after you are looking for low-cost or household made Christmas gift concepts is the fact that with affordable gifts, packaging is every thing. That house produced candy will be appreciated significantly additional if it comes in a box or jar that you simply have decorated oneself.

Wrapping is significant too. Standard Christmas wrap is affordable, and it is worth buying a roll of gold or silver ribbon to ensure that your presents will have that extra unique touch.

Of course it’s true that if your children or grandkids are hoping for a new bicycle, an Xbox or some other expensive item, they might be disappointed if all they obtain below the tree is usually a box of home made candy. And when children are disappointed, they tend to show it, in some cases loudly and violently. Within the worst circumstances, this can entirely ruin Christmas for everyone.

So in that circumstance, make sure to sit down with your youngsters several weeks ahead of the holidays and explain why you can’t get them a huge, pricey present this year. Tell them which you enjoy them and you would like for them to have almost everything that they want, but your priorities must be keeping food on the table and also a roof over everybody’s heads right now. To ensure that they feel involved, you might need to ask if they have some affordable Christmas gift tips for themselves or their brothers and sisters.

Inexpensive Christmas Gifts
Christmas is a time of joy, piece, and giving. It is also a time of being broke. Adults often think that the idea of making Christmas gifts is only for children who do not yet have their own money to buy gifts. However, with a little bit of ingenuity, some clever shopping, and a fair amount of free time, you can make some very grown up do it yourself Christmas gifts.

12 Creative Ways to Recycle Your Christmas Cards!
Don’t throw your Christmas cards away! There are so many creative ways to use your Christmas cards, many of which you can do with your kids. We have brought together some ideas below.

A European Christmas
With the holidays right around the corner, it’s hard not to reminisce our childhood memories and holidays of yesteryear. In each culture, there are differing values and traditions which are celebrated in different ways.

Choose Now a Holiday of Significance … (and Less Stress) for Your Family
Get more significance out of your holidays this season by creating and enjoy some new family traditions. You’ll be amazed how Christmas comes alive, right before your very eyes.

Easy Christmas Crafts for Children
Nothing brings out the kid in you better than sharing some together time with your own children and there’s no better time to do it than during the holiday season!

Christmas Gifts Kids Can Make
How kids can make adorable, yet practical Christmas gifts, with secret messages, out of pebbles.

5 Scrapbooking Secrets for the Holiday Season
These 5 scrapbooking secrets are sure to bring out the best in all of your albums and pages. Though inexpensive, they are the wonderful ways to add memorable value to the pages you will cherish and love for many holiday seasons to come!

Whatever Happened To Christmas?
“When I was growing up on our dairy farm forty years ago, the stores didn’t put up Christmas displays until the day after Thanksgiving. No one was really thinking about Christmas shopping before that,” said Ralph, author of the book Christmas in Dairy land (True Stories from a Wisconsin Farm) (trade paperback; August 2003; $13.95). “In fact, my mother felt so strongly about it that she didn’t even like to hear the word ‘Christmas’ until after we had finished eating Thanksgiving dinner.”

Country Christmas Idea: Milkweed Pod Poinsettias
At first glance, milkweed plants and poinsettias don’t seem to have much in common. If you live in an area where milkweed grows wild, however, you can use the dried milkweed pods to make poinsettia ornaments for your Christmas tree. Here’s how:

New Ways to Use Old Christmas Cards
Forty years ago when I was growing up on our dairy farm in Wisconsin, my mother always saved the Christmas cards she had received in the mail. In those days, people sent many more Christmas cards than they do now.

Make a Phone Book Christmas Tree
I’m not sure who showed my sister and I how to make a Christmas Tree out of a phone book all those years ago, but someone did, and I it made my mother quite happy. Why you ask? Well, considering that we lived in a fairly good size town, the phone book was pretty hefty, and folding all of the pages to make the tree was time consuming… my mother got an early Christmas gift.

Decorate the Christmas Tree With Popcorn
Part of what makes Christmas so special are the traditions that get handed down from year to year. One of my favorite traditions is decorating the Christmas Tree with a popcorn garland. When I was younger we did this at home and at school. The toughest part about making a popcorn decoration is not eating the popcorn while you make it.

Christmas Trivia
Everyone enjoys the hustle and bustle of Christmas shopping and decorating. Children love to write letters to Santa and get a reply with an envelope stamped “North Pole”. But even more fascinating is the origins of many of our beloved Christmas traditions.

Fragrant Christmas Shaping Dough
Let’s face it. Christmas is fun, and making holiday shapes with cinnamon dough will be a joy for everyone involved.

Construction Paper Reindeer
This one is a lot of fun for your children because it involves the use of one of their shoes, and both of their hands.

 

By Lesley Spencer

During the holiday season, time is a prized commodity and the preciousness of family is (hopefully) paramount in our minds. How is it then that we get so carried away with things that are not of lasting significance? I wonder too. Are you ready to make a change? Let’s tackle this now and relax sweetly into the holiday season while visions of sugarplums dance in our heads.

First, take some time now to discuss with your family what you truly want out of the holiday season this year. Perhaps it is a good time to introduce or reinforce the original meaning of Christmas (or whatever holiday you celebrate). Maybe this is the year your family breaks the cycle of overspending and chooses a simpler holiday that involves more time with family and friends.

For instance, I know one family who chooses to give three gifts to each child for Christmas representing the three wise men’s gifts at the birth of Christ. The other giving that is done is to those less fortunate. The focus in this family is on the original meaning of Christmas – the celebration of the birth of Christ and enjoying time with loved ones.

Another way to get more significance out of your holiday is to create and enjoy some family traditions. Do your children look forward to certain things each holiday? A few of my children’s favorite holiday traditions include making a gingerbread house, baking Christmas cookies, watching Christmas movies by the fireplace and decorating our Christmas tree while drinking hot chocolate and listening to our favorite Christmas CDs. Childhood memories themselves are a precious gift to give our children.

Here are some ideas in case you are looking for some new traditions to start:

• Go Christmas caroling with your friends or neighbors

• Roast chestnuts over an open fire

• Make Reindeer food (dry corn, glitter, bird seed) and have your children scatter it on the lawn on Christmas Eve

• Make Christmas ornaments to keep or give as gifts

• Attend church service on Christmas Eve

• Have everyone put on their favorite PJs and drive through town to view Christmas lights while singing (or listening to) your favorite Christmas songs.

• Go to a Christmas play or to a live nativity scene.

In addition to family traditions, here are some other ideas of holiday significance your family can try:

• Adopt a needy family or elderly person to brighten their holidays.

• Take cookies to a nursing home and have your children sing carols.

• Sponsor a child in another country for the holidays and beyond at: http://www.compassion.com.

• Deliver homemade goodies with a smile to the homeless or those less fortunate.

• Invite single neighbors or friends to holiday activities.

• Work in a soup kitchen feeding the hungry.

And for gift giving, celebrate less gifts and more substance with these ideas:

• Give coupons for free childcare to a couple that could use some time alone.

• Give “gift certificates” for a hot meal prepared by your family.

• Draw names instead of purchasing for everyone in your extended family.

• Give to a charity on behalf of a family member. Check out: www.charitygiftcertificates.org and www.justgive.org

• Help hungry families feed themselves at: http://www.heifer.org/

• Make gifts with your children such as:

*Frames, flowerpots, art, self-portraits, family photos and more. Visit these sites for ideas: www.familycrafts.about.com and www.kaboose.com

• Have a silly (White Elephant) gift exchange instead of buying presents. Ask everyone to bring something from home that is no longer wanted and needs a new home. (The sillier / funnier the better.) When everyone gathers, draw numbers to see who picks a gift first. Follow in order until everyone has a gift. The person whose turn it is can choose to take a gift already opened instead of choosing a wrapped gift. If so, the person whose gift was taken gets to pick a new wrapped (or open) gift. Continue until everyone has had a turn.

Just remember whatever your family chooses, choose to create lasting and warm memories that you and your family will cherish for a lifetime. Our families and our time together are precious!

Lesley Spencer is founder and president of the national association of Home-Based Working Moms (http://www.HBWM.com), the HBWM.com, Inc. Network of Websites and author of the Work-at-Home Workbook. She has a Master’s Degree in Public Relations and has been featured in numerous media outlets including CBS News, Forbes, Business Week, Parents, Wall Street Journal and USA Today. She has been working from home for over 10 years and has two children whom she absolutely adores!

By C. Bailey-Lloyd

With the holidays right around the corner, it’s hard not to reminisce our childhood memories and holidays of yesteryear. In each culture, there are differing values and traditions which are celebrated in different ways.

During the 70′s, growing up ‘German’ in Europe was one of the most fascinating and magical decades. Having strong German roots, our family participated in many German Christmas traditions. One of those traditions was Advent. The Advent, or Christmas calendar, is picture-box calendar decorated with wintry & Christmas scenes, biblical characters and ‘St. Nicolas.’ On the face of the calendar, are 24 small doors, each containing a small chocolate – one opened each day for the holiday season. The December 24th door, which is the ‘Heiligabend’ (Christmas Eve) is usually the largest door on the calendar and most often contains a chocolate Nativity. As children, we relished in this fun, and tasty feature of the holiday season.

But Advent wasn’t simply comprised of the Holiday Calendar, we also partook in the Advent Wreath, or ‘Adventskranz’ which was beautifully displayed on tables throughout the house. Wreathes held 4 candles; the first candle being lit the fourth Sunday before Christmas, and another one each Sunday thereafter. Around the evergreen wreath of candles, our family would gather as each candle was meticulously lit. My mom would recite a simple, German passage each time she would light a candle:

“Advent, Advent
Ein Kerzlein brent.
Erst Eins,
den Zwei,
den Drei,
den Vier -
den steht der Kristkind vor der tur.”

Which translates into, ‘Advent, Advent, a candle burns. First one, then two, then three, then four – then stands the Christ Child before the door.’

For you see, in Germany, it is the ‘Kristkind’ (Christ Child) who brings gifts on Christmas Eve.

Another childhood pastime was St. Nikolaustag (St. Nicholas Day) was a fun and lighthearted tradition whereby children everywhere anxiously awaited the arrival of December 6th when the Nikolaus, or Weinachtsmann (Santa Claus) came. Leading up to Nikolaustag, we children would have to behave very well, because St. Nikolaus could ‘see everything’ we did. And the night before December 6th, we would have to clean our winter boots meticulously to put outside our doors. Why the heck would we clean our boots and place them outside our doors? Well, I’ll tell you why – if we were good, and our boots were really clean, St. Nikolaus would stuff our boots with candies, little toys and chocolates. If we were bad, we would receive a bundle of switches or lumps of coal.

Unknown to popular American custom, the ‘Weinachtsmann’ was conceived by German-American Illustrator, Thomas Nast, who created the Christmas image of Santa in America – which, ultimately set a precedent for the permanent, symbolic establishment of Santa Claus.

Traditionally, German Christmas is observed through ‘Heilige Drei Konige Tag,’ or Three Kings Day (also known as the Magi or the Wise Men). In some parts of Europe, such as Austria, Germany and Switzerland, the Letters C + M + B (Caspar, Melchor, and Balthazar – and, ‘Christus mansionem benedicat,’ meaning ‘Christ bless this house.’) are etched with chalk above doorways and home entrances on January 6th. Of course, this is the epitome of the 12 Days of Christmas

Finally, on the ‘Kristkind Abend’ (Christ Child Eve or Christmas Eve), aside from the Weinachts Baum (Christmas Tree custom started by Martin Luther), families receive ‘Bunte Teller,’ or colored plates filled with oranges, candies, Marzipan (comprised of almonds and suger), Lebkuchen (gingerbread), Stollen (fruit bread) and an assortment of chocolates and other goods. Before any gifts are exchanged, Christmas Carols like Stille Nacht (Silent Night from Austrian composer Franz Gruber) are sung by the tree.

To this day, I am still amazed at the profound effects of Christmas’ past have had on me. As a child, the holiday was mystical and magical, as an adult, its beautiful memories are forever etched in my heart and soul.

Wishing all a happy, memory-filled, holiday season!

© A European Christmas – All Rights Reserved by C. Bailey-Lloyd/LadyCamelot

About the Author:

C. Bailey-Lloyd/LadyCamelot is the Public Relations Director & Writer for Holistic Junction — Your source of information for Holistic Practitioners; Massage Schools; Reflexology Schools; Hypnotherapy Schools, and Natural Healing Schools; Alternative Healthcare; Insightful Literature and so much more!

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Hello everyone. Just a quick note to let you know that I’ve decided to add some Christmas recipes to the site. When you’re hard at work making crafts for the holidays you’re bound to get hungry so don’t be afraid to try some of these goodies and see what you think.

John