Thursday, June 20, 2013

Sew a Few Wool Hearts for Your Christmas Tree


      This past Christmas I decided to use up some wool scraps I had stashed in
my collections of fabric. I layered and cut three different sizes of hearts and then
stitched these together with a blanket stitch. Then I added a few ribbon rosettes to
the center of each heart.


Friday, June 14, 2013

Santa's Christmas Greetings Gift Tags

       These Christmas greeting tags of Santa come in blue, green, red and brown. I have cleaned, redrawn and restored these designs from a very old newspaper clipping. About 1910. Use them in your personal crafts only please.





Have a question about the illustration? Just type it in the comment box and I'll get back to you as soon as possible. I only publish content that is closely related to the subject, folks.

Christmas Clipart or Clip Art Pages On This Blog: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61

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Sunday, June 2, 2013

Santa's Toy Bag Gift Tags

      Some gifts are a little too awkward to wrap with paper. Print these large Christmas gift tag graphics for your little one's BIG gift. Then tie it on to their bike etc... with a big red or green ribbon!

Have a question about the illustration? Just type it in the comment box and I'll get back to you as soon as possible. I only publish content that is closely related to the subject, folks.

Christmas Clipart or Clip Art Pages On This Blog: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Color These Beautiful Christmas Bisque Head Dolls




Description of Coloring Page: Here are some coloring pages of stunning antique dolls for you to color. When I was very young I often asked for a doll similar to these for Christmas. However, my parents were not wealthy enough to gift to me such a doll. Parents can mount these paper beauties onto heavy cardstock so that their little ones will have a bisque head doll that won't break or even cost much more than a few pennies!

Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.


"Subscribe http://tinyurl.com/BarcroftTV twitter: https://twitter.com/Barcroft_TV Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BarcroftMedia Doll mad Kathy Libraty is barely visible amongst her astonishing collection of antique dolls - worth a whopping £1.23m. Every inch of the 52-year-old's home is filled with over 1000 of the figures she has been collecting for over 25 years."

Monday, March 25, 2013

Color Old St. Nick With His Bag of Toys


Old St. Nick carries a very heavy load of toys on his back for children to color.
 
Description of Coloring Page: toys, bag of toys, ark, bugles, clown, giraffe, big boots, costume, Santa Claus

Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.

St. Nick is coming to town cartoon classic.

        After you have colored Old St. Nick and his big pack of toys, set it aside to paste inside of a larger picture. You may need to practice drawing this fireplace smaller before adding it to a larger final drawing. Just take it slow, step-by-step and before you know it, you will have a very nice picture!

Left, "Just copy these two forms, and see a thing well known to you and me." Center, "Add curves and circles like those her; they'll help to make our picture clear." Right, "Some toys in stockings, a clock and vase give us a sketch of our fireplace."

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Santa's Greeting Puzzle

      Santa Claus has invited the children to his workshop to look at some of the articles he is to give as presents. He has brought fourteen of the toys and placed them on the floor. "Now children," he says, "if you will arrange the names of the articles in their proper order you will find that the first letters spell a greeting."

Monday, March 18, 2013

Santa Loves Little Girls and Boys

I love little girls and boys,
And I like to bring
them candies and 
toys:
So, sleep sound,
And I'll come around
To leave you a bundle
of joys.

       Did you know that Lithuanians cover their Christmas Eve dinner table with layers of straw beneath the table cloth to symbolize the manger?

Above is a mystery puzzle; it is a picture of the toy Avery wants
most for Christmas. Print, cut and assemble the black and white
puzzle pieces to discover just what that toy is.

"Keep Christmas Merry"

Twas Christmas broached the
mightiest air
Twas Christmas told the merriest tale:
A Christmas gambol oft would cheer
The poor man's hart through half
the year.
* * *
Heap on more wood' the wind is chill
But let it whistle as it will,
We'll keep our Christmas merry still.

Sir Walter Scott

       Did you know that Brazilians celebrate Christmas Eve with a feast of delicious fluffy pancakes served with codfish cakes and toast? They save their famous cheese cake for Christmas Day.


 Try these cute cheesecake strawberry Santas by Carina. They would be a special treat that older kids could make for Christmas appetizers or desert.

Santa on the roof top ready to deliver presents to the children you draw inside.

        Now it's time to draw a Happy Christmas home filled with love and cheer! Include a fireplace for Santa to come down and don't forget to draw stockings for all those toys too! Draw a giant Christmas tree inside the house and trim it with glitter and stickers from the store.
 

Hidden Christmas Treasures

      There are six Christmas presents hidden in this picture. There are also four black letters which, when rightly arranged, spell the name of the present for Willie, and six outline letters which spell the name of the present for his sister Luiu.

Color Santa and The Children Who Visit Him

Here is old Santa bring lots of toys and goodies to all the good children. Color his coat and bag whatever color you'd like.

Description of Coloring Page: children, Victorian Santa, bag of toys, old-fashioned 

"I always come to visit you at Christmas-time each year,
 But every time I come along I miss a face that's dear;
Some girlie is a woman grown, some boy is now a man,
But while the crop of kiddies lasts I'll do the best I can
To make you shout instead of cry,
And make you laugh instead of sigh!"

Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
 

        Dear Old Santa is fun to color that's very true but here's another challenge for you. Draw an old-fashioned Christmas tree and trim it with lovely tinsel to see . . .
This tree is trimmed with baubles, candles that light and a tiny gate underneath branches. Draw it out in three easy steps on your paper, take your time.


       "At Christmas time every little boy and girl with a mother and father to make them happy should stop and think of the thousands of boys and girls less fortunate and do something for them, however small, to brighten their Christmas day. Dress up a doll of yours and give it to the little girl who has none. It will make her very happy. If it is a boy that you want to make happy why not give him your baseball bat or any other toys you can share? He will treasure them for a long time, and you will feel that "it is more blessed to give than receive.'' - Harriet L. Zinck, Age 11.

Santa Bug Puzzle


      Santa Claus is a funny old fellow, and the tiny Santa Claus is even more amusing. He has just left some toys and goodies for the Bugg family, and he has purposely labelled the boxes on the floor wrong, so that the little bugs will not be able to make out what is in them until they are opened.
      As a clue, we will say that the word printed on each box contains the name of the particular present in that box. What are the presents?

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Color This Christmas Greeting from Santa

Santa rings in the spirit of Christmas giving every year for good little boys and girls. Color his
bell, sack, and face for fun.

Description of Coloring Page: bell ringing, sack of toys, dear old Santa Claus, text "Merry Christmas"

"Some good old-fashioned customs
Go out of style, no doubt,
But sending Christmas Greetings
We couldn't do without.
And so the custom lingers;
Let us hope it always will,
For the same old-fashioned friendship
Prompts the same old greetings still."

Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
 
 
        Below is a little book cover shaped like Santa Claus. Print this out, color the cover and cut out the shape of Santa. Trace around Santa on top of white typing paper. Then cut out several white pages the same shape as the cover around this tracing. Now you can staple both the Santa cover and the empty pages altogether along the dotted line. Fold the stack in half at this same dotted line and your book is ready for you to add anything you want to it. Write about your Christmas memories if you like.
 
Print, cut-out, and color this book cover shaped like Santa Clause.

More Fun Coloring Santa Claus:

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

A Puzzling Chimney


      Santa Claus got kind of mixed up when he went into this chimney. Can you cut out the bricks on the front of the chimney and put them back, rearranged, so they will form a perfect picture of Santa Claus?

A St. Nick Portrait Puzzle


      A puzzle for little folks' sharp eyes. Here you may find not only Santa Claus, but his deer and sleigh, a Christmas tree, a Christmas turkey, a bad little boy who was skipped by St. Nick, a good little boy and his good little sister and some of the toys they received. Print out the picture and spin it around to find all of the items mentioned.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

A Frontier Christmas at Fort Sisseton

      Fort Sisseton near Britton, South Dakota was established in 1864. As Fort Sisseton Historic State Park, it was designated as a State Historical Park in 1959. Fort Sisseton is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. It has 14 of its original buildings remaining.The fort with 35 acres (14 ha) was listed on the National Register in 1973. The listing included 15 contributing buildings and 9 contributing sites.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Christmas Articles and Music From 1917

 Hang Up a Jar Instead of A Stocking 
      No little Mexican boy or girl ever thinks of hanging up a stocking. They have something far more interesting. Three or four days before Christmas stands spring up about the alameda, or open park, without which no Mexican village is complete. All about those shops are hung the pinatas, which take the place of Christmas stockings. These are apparently great dolls 2 or 3 feet tall, dressed in tissue paper, with papier mache faces and dangling legs and arms. In reality their flowing paper garments conceal earthen jars for the holding of candles. 
      Sometimes the pinatas are in the form of angels or fairies, but usually they represent some person prominent in Mexico. President and Mrs. Diaz used to smile from every stand. The Mexican child may live in a hut built of flat stones piled together in a public lot, but he has his pinata at Christmas time.
      In the better homes the pinatas are strung on a rope across a room. They are already heavy with their load of dulces, or candies, and they dangle somewhat dangerously over the heads of the beholders. Finally, the tallest man is blindfolded, given a stout cane and turned round and round. Leaping up, he strikes at the suspended figures. Amid shrieks of laughter and directions he keeps striking until he hits one of the jars. "Crack!" go its sides, and being made of only baked clay, they crumble away and the sweets come pouring out. Nobody is too dignified to scramble for them. The older people are on their knees with the children. Every body gets at least a mouthful. Then another is blindfolded, turned about and told to strike for another sugary deluge. D. Crozer in McCall's Magazine.
 
William Norris as a "toy soldier", 1903
      Babes in Toyland was a operetta composed by Victor Herbert with a libretto by Glen MacDonough (1870–1924), which wove together various characters from Mother Goose nursery rhymes into a Christmas-themed musical extravaganza. The creators wanted to cash in on the extraordinary success of the stage musical The Wizard of Oz, which was produced in New York beginning in January 1903, under producer Fred R. Hamlin, and directed by Julian P. Mitchell. MacDonough had helped Mitchell with revisions to the Oz libretto by L. Frank Baum. Babes in Toyland features some of Herbert's most famous songs–among them "Toyland", "March of the Toys", "Go To Sleep, Slumber Deep", and "I Can't Do The Sum". The theme song "Toyland" and "March of the Toys" occasionally show up on Christmas compilations.  
      The original production opened at the Chicago Grand Opera house in June 1903, produced by Hamlin and directed by Mitchell, and toured to East Coast cities before opening in New York on October 13, 1903 and ran for 192 performances. This was followed by many successful tours and revivals. The piece was so popular that it spawned other "fairy-tale" shows over the next decade.

What Others Like to Eat at Christmastide
      Spain loves her turkeys, Nor does she find it necessary to run them to death on the farms in order to make their meat tender, for the fowls are driven into town from long distances, and their feet are tarred to withstand the hardness of the roads. For three days before Noche Buena the streets of the cities and villages are thick with squawking poultry and bleating lambs and kids that are destined for the slaughter.
      Cuba fattens up her turkeys on walnuts to make their flesh more toothsome. Mexico grinds the cooked turkey to a paste, which is mixed with chili, raisins, currants, wine and a few other ingredients into what is called mole de guajalote. France, too, although she shows her partiality for turkeys by cramming them with truffles, coquettes with her Christmas menu. Now she throws her scarf to blood red sausage, fat and juicy; now to stewed hare with unfermented wine; again to pheasants, to hazen hens, to heath cocks.
      In Brittany the home cured ham gives savor to the rye bread and to the chocolate porridge, especially dedicated to Noel. In Cuba baked hams, preciously boiled in champagne and well sugared, vie for favor with a Spanish piece de resistance called "Mors and Christians," in reminiscence of a page in Spanish history, and made of black beans and rice.
      In southern Italy eels, curled round with tail in mouth, defy time on the Christmas board by the emblem of eternity. In the smaller Italian cities on the day before Christmas the air is shrill and cries of kids being brought to market in panniers swung from donkey backs. Chickens, pigeons, tripe, boiling hot, are other dainties appropriate to the season, as well as turkeys, geese and calf's head.
      German and Scandinavian countries are noted for the bounty of their Christmas cheer. In rural neighborhoods the tables are spread from Christmas to Epiphany. England, too, offers wide and varied hospitality. In Warwickshire, for instance, they serve roast crab apples with fresh pork and elder wine. Yorkshire has its frumenty, its Yule cakes and plum pudding. Scotland boasts one with all her own-- haddock, stuffed with oatmeal and onions. Chicago Tribune.

Christmas Night
 ***
Sometimes I think Christmas night's the 
best.
Before the nursery fire, when we're un
dressed
And all the toys are put away, except
Perhaps my engine and the baby's bear.
Then mother comes away from all the
rest
Downstairs to tell our Christmas story
there.

She takes the baby on her lap and we
Sit 'round her on the hearth-rug so we
see
The pictures in the fire, and then she
tells
About how shepherds watched their
flocks by night
And what the angels said, and how the 
three 
Wise kings came riding--and the big
star's light.

And then she tells us how it showed the
way
To just a stable where the oxen stay.
And there they found Him in His
mother's arms.
A little baby Christ-Child-and he
smiled;
And that (she says) is what made Christ-
mas day
For you and me and every little child.
Before the nursery fire when we're un-
dressed
Sometimes I think that Christmas night's 
the best.  

Christmas Advertising From J. C. Penny in 1917
      James Cash Penney began his career in retail management when he opened The Golden Rule store, a partnership with Guy Johnson and Thomas Callahan, on April 14, 1902 in Kemmerer, Wyoming. He participated in the creation of two more stores, and purchased full interest in all three locations when Callahan and Johnson dissolved their partnership in 1907. In 1909, Penney moved his company headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah to be closer to banks and railroads. By 1912, Penney had 34 stores in the Rocky Mountain States. In 1913, all stores were consolidated under the J.C. Penney banner. The so-called "mother store", in Kemmerer, opened as the chain's second location in 1904. It still operates, as of 2011, albeit with hours shorter than many of its other store locations.
       In 1913, the company was incorporated under the new name, J. C. Penney Company, with William Henry McManus as a co-founder. In 1914, the headquarters was moved to New York City to simplify the buying, financing, and transportation of goods. Around this time, Bert J. Niver joined the company as a junior partner. By 1917, the company operated 175 stores in 22 states in the United States.
Gift suggestions for women in 1917
Gift suggestions for men in 1917.

Popular Christmas Dolls in 1917


      Carl and Pat along with Gretchen and Hortense, are making eyes at us this Christmas, inviting us to inquire into their merits. They belong to a new order of the beloved rag dolls that have always held the warmest corner of little folk's hearts. 
      These dolls are made of discarded socks or stockings and stuffed with cotton. White socks are used for the heads and colored ones for the bodies. Fancy stitching with heavy mercerized cotton or yarns, outlines the jackets, makes ties and garters and represents buttons. The eyes, nose and mouth are outlined also in black and red.

Craft An Old-World, Cotton Batting Santa

My versions of cotton batting Santas are dyed with tea.
      European artisans created ornaments from a process of spinning cotton, in forms of fruit and vegetables, and sometimes animals and people. Cotton batting ornaments are similar, which were also made in the Lauscha region. These were made from sheets of cotton batting, wrapped around a wire frame and hand painted. Often animal or human figures, these could also be dressed up in miniature items of clothing
      I made these cotton batting Santas, Belsnickels,  many years ago with very similar techniques used in the video below. I used little clay faces, though, instead of scrap ones. The Belsnickel is the forerunner of Santa Claus, a fur-clad and raggedy Christmas gift bringer who beats the children when they are not good. Antique & vintage figures depicting him are popular collectibles, particularly when they possess rabbit-fur beards and other original features. I added rabbit fur, bottle brush trees, old beads, and brown velvet to my versions to make them look similar to those that I had seen in antique shops.
      Victorians made Christmas ornaments such as these based upon patterns distributed through ladies magazines.  Victorian publishers also provided the instructions for multiple variations of cotton batting figures which proved popular across England, Europe and America. These were made in all sorts of shapes and designs, with all manner of materials, and often present a truly unique piece created not for sale, but by a family for their own tree.
"I used little clay faces, though, instead of scrap ones."
      The key interest in antique & vintage Christmas ornaments is that they are hand-made. Whether this was in a home, as part of a town’s cottage industry, or even mass manufactured, as long as the item was crafted by hand and not by machine, it is considered worthy of inclusion among these charming collectibles.
      You will find them in antique stores, at yard sales, in thrift stores, at flea markets, and on eBay. If you’re lucky, you may discover a hidden cache in your grandparents’ or parents’ attic.
      You can ascertain an antique or vintage item in a number of ways. Earlier ornaments are smaller than those of today. They are usually decorated in soft colors, with hand painted detail. Hand paint can be verified, so learn to spot it. The more examples you see, the more recognizable you will find it. The paint can often be faded or distressed. Hand blown glass items have an uneven base beneath the cap, while machine made are even. Older companies often marked their names on the item, whereas new cheap examples do not have this.
      Despite the fact that many items are becoming rarer and more expensive, there are still many many options for collectors on a budget. Prices vary from $1-$12,000 depending on the ornament, condition, and who is selling it. There are a myriad of options, and as always, buy what you admire. 
Antique cotton vegetables and fruits made for the Christmas tree.

Cotton Batting Ornaments: Step-by-Step Directions/Tutorials:
  1. DIY Cotton Batting Corn On The Cob Ornament
  2. A Craft Tutorial for a Cotton Batting Squirrel
  3. A Craft Tutorial for a Cotton Batting Hornet's Nest
  4. Wrap a Cotton Batting Christmas Bell
  5. Craft a spun cotton batting mushroom by hand
  6. DIY cotton batting cup of cocoa tutorial 
  7. A Craft Tutorial for a Cotton Batting Snowman 
  8. Craft a Cotton Batting Snow Baby
  9. Bend and Twist a Cotton Batting Birdcage 
  10. Cotton batting angel from Katty's Cosy Cove 
  11. Craft a Pear From Spun Cotton Batting 
  12. Sculpt a Cotton Batting Deer
  13. Pierrot Cotton Batting Figure 
  14. Bend a Wire Tree for a Miniature Ornament Collection: cotton batting tree 
  15. Simple Cotton Batting Acorn Ornaments 
  16. Cotton Batting Pumpkins (hollow) 
  17. How to Craft Cotton Batting Yule Log Ornaments 
  18. DIY Sea Shell Star Ornament
  19. Victorian Snowball Garland Tutorial
  20. Make This Spun Cotton Antique Looking Wreath 
  21. Craft Your Own Set of Spun Cotton Icicles 
  22. Craft a Pea Pod from Cotton Balls 
  23. Cover a wire frame basket with cotton batting 
  24. Handcrafted, Cotton Batting, Faux Candles
  25. Capturing the veiled lady in cotton...  
  26. Craft Raspberries from Cotton Batting 
  27. DIY the Prophet Jonah and Whale  
  28. DIY a cotton batting spider and web 
More Examples of Cotton Batting Santas & Figures:
How to dye textile materials to craft with: 
Scrap faces and tiny ornamental details:
This video shows a demonstration of the cotton batting Santa craft, step-by-step
by Lucy Webber.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

A Touching Dutch Christmas Custom

Song, "Bright Star of Bethlehem."

In Holland a touching custom exists. On the night before Christmas, in commemoration of the star of the east, the young men of the town assemble and carry through the dark streets a large bright star. All the people go out to the greet it and give to the bearers of the "star of Bethlehem," as it is called, alms for the poor.

More About Dutch Christmas Traditions: