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Decorating for Holidays
Harvest Home Decorating
Porch or Hallway Display
If you can get hold of a bale or two of hay this
is perfect for the base of your hallway or porch
display. If not, cover some boxes with
sacking, or a throw or a neutral coloured cloth
and build up from there.
Start with some large pumpkins for instant colour,
then add some fun to your harvest display by
making vegetable people. Heads can be
turnips, pumpkins, gourds or beetroots, and
arms and legs can be suggested by cucumbers,
carrots, parsnips or corn. The bodies can
be large parsnips, melons, anything you have to
hand. You could make mini ones for a table
or almost child sized for a kitchen, garden room
or porch. Terracotta pots make great hats
or boots to finish off the look and of
course flowerpot men made completely from
terracotta pots wired or stacked together with
wheat or corn poking out of the top one for hair
always look fantastic and it's a good way to
store pots that you won't need again until next
Spring.
Floral Arrangements
Using the abundance of nature at this time of
year can make for some unusual containers for
seasonal floral arrangements too. You can push
pieces of florists foam into holes made in
pumpkins or gourds or try hollowing out crinkly
cabbages, or gourds and stuffing them with pre
soaked florists foam before arranging a selection
of berries, grasses, seed heads, curly willow,
wired tiny pumpkins, oranges, pomegranates or
whatever you can get your hands on.
Another way to make ordinary containers special
is to wrap a couple of strips of double sided
tape around a plain vase or simple jar and stick
on overlapping fallen leaves, twigs, or even
vegetables. Secure these with a raffia,
string or green gardener's twine bow, before
filling with your chosen arrangement.
Nature's Table
Use fallen leaves as a base for a decoration that
runs down the middle of your table. I would
recommend that you use paper underneath just in
case any moisture left in the leaves damages a
polished table top. Then add twigs, or
small branches, acorns, cones and an abundance of
fruits and vegetables interspersed with candles
for a sumptuous look.
A row of apples along the centre of a table with
just enough of the apple carved out to drop in a
tea light candle looks magnificent and costs
hardly anything but a steady hand. For
upright candles a core remover can help take out
enough of the apple to keep a candle securely in
place.
Wreaths
Vine wreaths or the lighter coloured bamboo
variety are available quite inexpensively at
florist's supply shops. Use whatever you have to
hand, wheat, corn, dried or silk flowers in
appropriate colours and hot glue to the base
wreath before adding a raffia or paper ribbon
bow.
Wreaths made entirely of wired on pine cones
wrapped with gingham ribbon look very good at
this time of year and with a change of ribbon to
something more glamorous will do duty for
Christmas too.
If you do not have, or cannot afford to buy bases
for wreaths make some from cardboard. First
draw around a large plate, then draw around a
smaller plate. Cut out the hole in the
middle. Add some batting, wadding or any padding
that you can find then cover this with a fabric
remnant before hot gluing cones, fruits or any
other harvest decorations and a large bow
to the wreath. Children may enjoy just painting
the cardboard wreaths and sticking fallen leaves
all the way around.
Leaf Garland
You can also make a pretty leaf garland by
pressing leaves in a heavy book or telephone
directory for a few days and then stringing them
together with invisible thread or gold thread to
drape or wind anywhere that you need a little
extra colour.
Kid's Crafts
Kid's crafts make the most charming harvest
decorations of all. Use the Internet to find
ideas for fun projects, Kid's Domain Thanksgiving
Crafts at
http://www.kidsdomain.com/craft/_Thanks.html
has good ones, as does Childfun Thanksgiving
Crafts at
http://www.childfun.com/themes/thanks_craft.shtml
If you need more ideas just put Thanksgiving
crafts into a search engine and you are sure to
find plenty to keep creative fingers busy. Then
try to find the time to make memories by sitting
around the table with your kids enjoying cutting
and gluing and laughing and just giving thanks
for each other!
Colleen Moulding
Copyright 2000
| About
the Author
Colleen Moulding is a freelance writer from
England where she has had many features on parenting,
childcare, travel, the Internet and lots more published
in national magazines and newspapers. She has also
published a variety of women’s and children’s fiction.
Her work frequently appears at many sites on the
Internet and at her own site for women and children
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