Wednesday, July 31, 2013

How Are Glass Ornaments Made?

      A bauble is a spherical decoration that is commonly used to adorn Christmas trees. The bauble is one of the most popular Christmas ornament designs, and they have been in production since 1847. Baubles can have various designs on them, from "baby's first Christmas," to a favorite sports team. Many are plain, being simply a shiny sphere of a single color.
Old photograph of homes in Lauscha, Germany.
      The first decorated trees were adorned with apples, strings of popcorn, white candy canes and pastries in the shapes of stars, hearts and flowers. Glass baubles were first made in Lauscha, Germany, by Hans Greiner who produced garlands of glass beads similar to the popcorn strands and tin figures that could be hung on trees. The popularity of these decorations grew into the production of glass figures made by highly skilled artisans with clay molds.
      The artisans heated a glass tube over a flame, then inserted the tube into a clay mold, blowing the heated glass to expand into the shape of the mold. The original ornaments were only in the shape of fruits and nuts.
      After the glass cooled, a silver nitrate solution was swirled into it, a silvering technique developed in the 1850s by Justus von Liebig. After the nitrate solution dried, the ornament was hand-painted and topped with a cap and hook.
      Other glassblowers in Lauscha recognized the growing popularity of Christmas baubles and began producing them in a wide range of designs. Soon, the whole of Germany began buying Christmas glassware from Lauscha. On Christmas Eve 1832, a young Queen Victoria wrote about her delight at having a tree, hung with lights, ornaments, and presents placed round it. In the 1840s, after a picture of Victoria's Christmas tree was shown in a London newspaper decorated with glass ornaments and baubles from her husband Prince Albert's native Germany, Lauscha began exporting its products throughout Europe.
      In the 1880s, American F. W. Woolworth discovered Lauscha's baubles during a visit to Germany. He made a fortune by importing the German glass ornaments to the U.S.A.
A Woolworths company store is pictured here,
Westminster and Dorrance streets, Providence, R.I. in the 1930s or 1940s
      The first American-made glass ornaments were created by William DeMuth in New York in 1870. In 1880, Woolworth's began selling Lauscha glass ornaments. Other stores began selling Christmas ornaments by the late 19th century and by 1910, Woolworth's had gone national with over 1000 stores bringing Christmas ornaments across America. New suppliers popped up everywhere including Dresden die-cut fiberboard ornaments which were popular among families with small children.
By the 20th century, Woolworth's had imported 200,000 ornaments and topped $25 million in sales from Christmas decorations alone. As of 2009, the Christmas decoration industry ranks second to gifts in seasonal sales. Gloria Duchin, Inc., just one of the industry's Christmas ornament manufacturers and designers today, has over 100 million ornaments in circulation and produces millions of new ornaments each year.
      After World War II, the East German government turned most of Lauscha's glassworks into state-owned entities, and production of baubles in Lauscha ceased. After the Berlin Wall came down, most of the firms were reestablished as private companies. As of 2009, there are still about 20 small glass-blowing firms active in Lauscha that produce baubles. One of the producers is Krebs Glas Lauscha, part of the Krebs family which is now one of the largest producers of glass ornaments worldwide.
      Although glass baubles are still produced, baubles are now frequently made from plastic and available worldwide in a huge variety of shapes, colors and designs. There is a large number of manufactures producing sophisticated Christmas glass ornaments in Poland.
Birth of a Bauble, Modern Mechanix, 1941
      In it's first year of operation, the world’s only mass-production factory for manufacturing glass Christmas-tree ornaments, the Wellsboro, Pa., plant of the Corning Glass Works, has turned out more than half of all the new decorations which will bedeck American trees this season. At the rate of 400 a minute—approximately 2,000,000 a week—the brightly colored globes have been pouring from the production line. Six months of intensive work by Corning engineers made possible the ingenious machines which turn a pound of glass into thirty average-size ornaments. A ribbon of molten glass enters one end of the production line and a steady stream of bulbs which have been shaped, silvered inside, and tinted outside, comes out at the other end. One hundred and eighty different sizes, styles, and colors are produced at the Wellsboro plant. Formerly, most of our glass Christmas-tree decorations came from central Europe, where families of craftsmen formed and tinted them by hand. Machine methods not only speed up production but are said to turn out more uniform globes.
Left, This control room feeds air and gas to the tank furnace of the Wellsboro, Pa., plant of the Corning Glass Works, where a mixture of sand, soda ash, and lime is turned into dainty bubbles of glass to adorn America’s Christmas trees. Right, Down a hopper into the furnace come the carefully mixed ingredients. It takes about three weeks to change a batch of the raw material into usable glass, which is of almost the same kind as that used for electric – light bulbs.
Middle, From time to time, a sample of glass is taken out of the furnace for testing. Just as an expert candy maker con tell when candy is ready to take from the stove, so a skilled glass worker can judge the quality of his gloss by eye. The viscosity shows when the glass is ready for use. Far Right, New material is added little by little until about thirty-five tons of glass has been prepared. Guarded by steel shields from the 2,800-degree heat, a workman pushes the finely ground mixture onto the molten mass.
Left, Shielding his eyes from the blinding glare of the flames with a window of dark glass, a workman peers through an opening in the furnace, whose heat reproduces in miniature the conditions on the sun. Right, Streaming from the furnace, molten glass enters the “ribbon machine,” which carries it along between rollers like a moving ribbon. This machine is also used in the manufacture of electric-light bulbs.
Left, As the ribbon goes along horizontally, clinging to the underside of a moving belt, puffs of compressed air blow through it from above to form bubbles that grow in size until each is plucked off between the halves of a mold moving up to meet it. Right, Clamped inside the mold, the bubble of glass is blown up to the desired shape. In the picture below, one of the molds has been opened to show how the glass sphere is formed with its neck attached. Molds are changed to make ornaments of any type.
Left, Asbestos “hands” on this rotary transfer mechanism take the hot, shaped bulbs from the molds of the ribbon machine. Then, turning from a horizontal to a vertical position, they lay them on a belt … Right, … which carries them to the “lehr” for cooling. It takes the globes about twenty minutes to pass through this forty-foot machine, where the temperature is lowered gradually to prevent strains.
Left, Emerging from the lehr, the bulbs are carried by a moving belt past girls who remove broken pieces. At this stage, the clear glass spheres resemble soap bubbles floating on a stream of water. A pound of glass makes thirty average-size globes. Right, These girl inspectors are examining the globes for imperfections. Modern machine methods used at the Corning plant not only permit greater speed of production, but also turn out stronger and much more uniform ornaments.
Left, Picking up bulbs at random from the moving belt, this inspector holds them against the polariscope, in which polarized light reveals any strains created in cooling. Right, Another type of polarized-light testing instrument is seen below. When a bulb is held up in front of the lighted screen, telltale iridescent patterns show lines of stress or tension which might make it break easily.
Left, Here girls are putting the bulbs on racks in a machine for silvering and coloring. First, chemicals are sprayed up through the necks to give a mirror-like surface inside. . . Right, … then the racks pass through the dye vats where baths of brilliant color give them the outer tints of red, blue, green, gold, and silver that add sparkle to trees on Christmas Day.
Left, After, the dye has been dried quickly by heat, the necks are cut off by an automatic machine. Occasionally, however, one of the bulbs gets by the machine. It is the job of this girl to catch such strays and cut off their necks by hand on a Carborundum wheel. Right, At the end of the long production line, the globes are sorted and broken ones are removed. Now they are packed in partitioned cardboard boxes.
Above, Enough ornaments to cover a whole forest of Christmas trees are contained in these cartons stacked in a warehouse awaiting shipment. Two million are turned out every week.
Antique glass baubles.

Vintage glass ornaments.

More About Christmas Baubles:

Saturday, July 27, 2013

The Sound of Music

The Sound of Music is one of those films that my family watches every Christmas but is not specifically about the holiday. 

The movie poster.
      The Sound of Music is a 1965 American musical film directed by Robert Wise and starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. The film is based on the Broadway musical The Sound of Music, with songs written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, the musical book written by the writing team of Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, and the screenplay written by Ernest Lehman. Based on the book The Story of the Trapp Family Singers by Maria von Trapp, the film is about a young woman who leaves an Austrian convent to become a governess to the seven children of a naval officer widower. The Sound of Music contains several popular songs, including "Edelweiss", "My Favorite Things", "Climb Ev'ry Mountain", "Do-Re-Mi", "Sixteen Going on Seventeen", "The Lonely Goatherd", and the title song, "The Sound of Music".
      The Sound of Music was filmed on location in Salzburg, Austria; the state of Bavaria in Germany; and at the 20th Century Fox studios in California, United States. It was photographed in 70mm Todd-AO format by Ted D. McCord. The film won a total of five Academy Awards including Best Picture and displaced Gone with the Wind as the highest-grossing film of all-time. The cast album was also nominated for a Grammy Award for Album of the Year.
      In 2001, the United States Library of Congress selected the film for preservation in the National Film Registry as it was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Read more . . . 

More Links to The Sound of Music:
More Links to the Von Trapp Family:

The Many Hazards of Christmas

      The dangers of fire at Christmas is nothing to make light of in reality. However, sometimes one reads things that simply present themselves quite innocently and can not help but wonder at the irony of it all. Had the Chief Deputy known what we know today, he might have flipped his lid after some degree of reflection.

This ad first appeared in
The Alliance Herald
in Butte County, Neb.,
December 12, 1912
 Help To Stop The Holiday Fires, 1912

      Christmas will soon be celebrated by the people of this state and the Christmas tree and public entertainments in crowded churches and halls and homes will be used to embellish the occasion.
      In order that nothing will occur to mar the occasion and cause a Life Time of Regrets, I earnestly urge those having these matters in charge to observe the following rules:
      Do not decorate your Christmas tree with paper, cotton, celluloid or any other inflammable material. Use metallic tinsel and other non-flammable decorations only, and set the tree securely so that it cannot tip over. Do not use cotton to represent snow; if you must have snow use asbestos fiber.
      If there is any other possible way to light the tree do not use candles. The tree itself is very inflammable and will burn when the needles become dry. Where electric lights can be obtained small bulbs of different colors can be strung around over the tree but this work should only be done by some one thoroughly understanding electricity. Large lamps with reflectors so arranged as to throw the light on the tree will give the tree a beautiful appearance and will not endanger the lives of those in attendance. Do not permit Santa Clause to wear an inflammable beard or wig. Usually the presents that are placed upon the Christmas trees are done up in tissue paper that is very inflammable and Flaxen Haired Dolls and Teddy Bears and such presents inflammable and a spark from one of the little candles is liable to start a fire and there is always some one present ready to scream and yell "FIRE", and the the trouble takes place: a rush is made for the door and there are enough grown people in the audience to trample the life out of the little children who are present and who are filled with expectancy at receiving the gifts that are on the tree but instead of receiving a present they are liable to receive either painful or fatal injuries and an occasion of merriment will be turned into mourning. All aisles and exits should be kept absolutely clear so that if an accident should happen all of the occupants can retire from the building quickly and uninjured.
      I hope the bulletins I have issued have implanted in the minds of those who will have these entertainments in charge a determination to prevent injury and loss of life of all those who attend these Christmas entertainments. 

Very truly yours, 
C. A. Randall, 

Electric Christmas Lights for The Christmas Tree

Queen Victoria and Prince Albert
stand with their children around
a Christmas tree lit with candles.
Lighting The Christmas Tree in England

      The Christmas tree was adopted in upper-class homes in 18th-century Germany, where it was occasionally decorated with candles, which at the time was a comparatively expensive light source. Candles for the tree were glued with melted wax to a tree branch or attached by pins. Around 1890, candle holders were first used for Christmas candles. Between 1902 and 1914, small lanterns and glass balls to hold the candles started to be used. Early electric Christmas lights were introduced with electrification, beginning in the 1880s.
      The illuminated Christmas tree became established in the United Kingdom during Queen Victoria's reign, and through emigration spread to North America and Australia. In her journal for Christmas Eve 1832, the delighted 13-year-old princess wrote, "After dinner.. we then went into the drawing-room near the dining-room. There were two large round tables on which were placed two trees hung with lights and sugar ornaments. All the presents being placed round the trees". Until the availability of inexpensive electrical power in the early twentieth century, miniature candles were commonly (and in some cultures still are) used.
      In the United Kingdom, electrically powered Christmas lights are generally known as fairy lights. In 1881, the Savoy Theater, London was the first building in the world to be lit entirely by electricity. Sir Joseph Swan, inventor of the incandescent light bulb, supplied about 1,200 Swan incandescent lamps, and a year later, the Savoy owner Richard D'Oyly Carte equipped the principal fairies with miniature lighting supplied by the Swan United Electric Lamp Company, for the opening night of the Gilbert and Sullivan opera Iolanthe on 25 November 1882. The term fairy lights for a string of electrically powered Christmas lights has been in common usage in the UK ever since.
Real candles lighted on a Christmas tree, 1900.

Lighting The Christmas Tree in America

      Edward Hibberd Johnson was an inventor and business associate of American inventor Thomas Alva Edison. He was involved in many of Edison's projects, and was a partner in an early organization which evolved into the General Electric Company, one of the largest Fortune 500 companies in the United States. When Johnson was Vice President of the Edison Electric Light Company, a predecessor of Con Edison, he created the first known electrically illuminated Christmas tree at his home in New York City in 1882. Edward H. Johnson became the Father of Electric Christmas Tree Lights i.e., strand lights.
      The first known electrically illuminated Christmas tree was the creation of Edward H. Johnson. While he was Vice-President of the Edison Electric Light Company, he had Christmas tree bulbs especially made for him. He proudly displayed his Christmas tree — hand-wired with 80 red, white, and blue electric light bulbs the size of walnuts — on December 22, 1882, at his home in New York City. The story was reported in the Detroit Post and Tribune by a reporter named Croffut. Croffut wrote "Last evening I walked over beyond Fifth Avenue and called at the residence of Edward H. Johnson, vice-president of Edison’s electric company". Although Johnson's address at that time is not known, he lived in one of the first areas of New York City wired for electric service. Edward H. Johnson became known as the Father of Electric Christmas Tree Lights. By 1900, businesses started stringing up Christmas lights behind their windows. Christmas lights were too expensive for the average person; as such, electric Christmas lights did not become the majority replacement for candles until 1930.
American President, Calvin Coolidge
Lights the first White House Christmas
Tree in 1923. Lighting for trees at that
time was very expensive.
      From that point on, electrically illuminated Christmas trees, indoors and outdoors, grew with mounting enthusiasm in the United States and elsewhere. In 1895, U.S. President Grover Cleveland proudly sponsored the first electrically lit Christmas tree in the White House. It was a huge specimen, featuring more than a hundred multicolored lights. The first commercially produced Christmas tree lamps were manufactured in strings of nine sockets by the Edison General Electric Company of Harrison, New Jersey and advertised in the December 1901 issue of the Ladies' Home Journal. Each socket took a miniature two-candela carbon-filament lamp.    
      Albert Sadacca  is credited with popularizing electric Christmas tree lights for ordinary, private use. According to the legend, in 1917, at the age of 15, after a fire in New York City started by candles suspended in a tree, Sadacca adapted the novelty lighting that his parents sold for use in Christmas trees. A similar story is told about Ralph E. Morris, who created an electric light set using a telephone switchboard in 1908. Earlier electric Christmas tree lights had been used in 1885 in Grover Cleveland's White House, and in 1882 at the home of Edward H. Johnson, a vice-president of the Edison Electric Light Company.
      Other sources indicate that Albert and his brothers, Henri and Leon, founded their business in 1914 (three years before the fire, when Albert would presumably have been only 12 years old). Nevertheless, in 1925, Sadacca's company, enjoying success in the new Christmas light business, proposed that several companies then competing for the market join together as a trade organization. The name of the organization was The National Outfit Manufacturer's Association. The association merged into a single company the following year, and began several decades of dominance in the rapidly growing Christmas lighting market as the NOMA Electric Company.


       Above, Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory, reconstructed at Greenfield Village at HenryFord Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Edison did not invent the first electric light bulb, although many Americans believe that he did, but instead he invented the first commercially practical incandescent light. After many experiments with platinum and other metal filaments, Edison returned to a carbon filament. The first successful test was on October 22, 1879; it lasted 13.5 hours. Edison continued to improve this design and by November 4, 1879, filed for U.S. patent 223,898 (granted on January 27, 1880) for an electric lamp using "a carbon filament or strip coiled and connected to platina contact wires".

 
 Interview with Noma Lites Managing Director Clive Capel at Harrogate 201. View multiple vintage ads for NOMA Lites here.

Related Links:

knotted Christmas light bulbs

Thursday, July 25, 2013

My Top Three Magazine Issues for Antique Ornament Collectors

Better Homes and Gardens, Country Home
December 1986. This issue featured ornament
collections belong to Olive Vollmar of
Missouri. Back issues must be purchased
from independent dealers.
      Have you ever purchased a magazine that you just couldn't let go of? No matter how many years passed, no matter how dated the content, there's just something special about the way it makes you feel when read it from cover to cover. Well, I've kept a few and some of these I even inherited from my mother-in-law for the exact same reasons; she couldn't pitch them and neither have I. Now my daughters read them every year and pour over the photographs dreaming of yesteryear and hoping the current Christmas is just as inspiring.
      My mother-in-law kept an old edition of Country Home because it featured a ornament collector from Missouri, Olive Vollmar. One year, I traveled with Betty, my mother-in-law, to meet Mrs. Vollmar. She was hosting a special tour and discussion for the members of the St. Louis Herb Society or perhaps it was with the Botanical Gardens members, I'm not quite sure. Anyway, Betty invited me to  travel with her because she knew that I needed a little personal R&R away from my newborn and that I loved all things Christmas.
Early American Homes, December 1997.
      We had a wonderful time talking with Mrs. Vollmar and looking in every corner of her home. She had a simply magnificent collection of Christmas antiques, such that I have never seen before in all my life. In fact, I have never even seen it's equal in a museum. She had dozens of six foot feather trees that rotated in musical stands, Dresdens that most folks have never recorded in books, blown and molded glass from the Thuringian Mountains, scraps from the post-Civil War era, beaded ornaments from Czechoslovakia and Christmas kugels hanging from the ceilings of her kitchen! A few of these decorations were featured in the 1986 December edition of Country Home magazine and I suspect this is why Betty had kept it. However, it also inclued several romantic articles about the High country in Colorado, children's gifts and beautifully decorated homes featuring early American antiques.
      By the time I purchased a December issue by Early American Homes in '97, (same publishers below) enthusiasm for crafting antique reproduction ornaments was well established in the Grimm household. This edition featured feather trees decorated with ornaments authentic to the time of their crafting plus contemporary Belsnickles by American carvers. And as if this wasn't enough,  the publishers also featured a stencil of an angel copied from a German fractur for a charming Christmas tablecloth!
Early American Life, Christmas Edition, 2005
      In 2005 Early American Life published an excellent Christmas edition featuring antique Christmas ornaments displayed on feather trees, contemporary holiday artisans, antique chocolate molds and historic furnishings. The Christmas, feather trees photographed in this issue came from the home of Darla and Jerry Arnold who had been collecting antique ornament varieties for forty years.
      All three issues have permanent places among the stacks of craft catalogs and patterns at our house. And soon, I will post ornament projects inspired by their pages.

 
Darla and Jerry Arnold display their vintage Christmas collection at the Golden Glow museum, 2011.

Vintage and Antique Ornament Links Online: 

"Christmas in old Santa Fe" by Pedro Ribera Ortega

      A marvelous read for Christmas; I look forward to sharing this little volume by Pedro Ortega annually as a kind of a Christmas ritual in my home. Pedro Ribera Ortega was a true historian of Santa Fe but also a lover of story telling and what I would call a cultural preservationist. I recommend this small volume to anyone who is interested in the history of New Mexico and who also has an greater interest in understanding Catholic, Native American and Hispanic traditions during the Christmas holidays.


Right. First Edition 1961 by Pinon Publishing Co. Second Edition, 1973 The Sunstone Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico

"The Christmas Tree Book" by Phillip V. Snyder

The History of the Christmas Tree & Antique
Christmas Tree Ornaments: The Christmas Tree
Book by Philip V. Snyder.  The Viking press,
1976, and Penguin Books Ltd., 1977
      For those of you who are interested in doing some serious reading about antique Christmas tree ornaments, primarily from Germany, The Christmas Tree Book by Snyder is one of the rare publications available in English about the subject.
      Snyder also writes about the history of Christmas trees in both Western Europe and the United States. 

"Snyder is a veritable  mine of fascinating facts about his favorite subject--and his enthusiasm is quite contagious." --Harper's Bazaar

      The book also has many photographs, although not what I would call exhaustive, that record popular types of ornamentation purchased in the United States prior the the World Wars. It should be very helpful to collectors in terms of explaining just what and why particular Christmas ornaments are valuable enough to collect at auction. Both mouth-blown glass and Dresden molded cardboard ornaments are covered in the volume, as well as cotton batting and wax dipped ornaments to a lesser degree.

"A seasonal bonus, too big to stuff a stocking but just right for under-the-tree display . . . the reproductions are delightful." --Kirkus Reviews

      The photography in the book is not by today's standards all that impressive. One must consider that at the time it was published in 1977, very little had ever been written about the topic for ordinary American consumption. Today it is still a seldom explored topic for serious history buffs to write about. Although I have seen volumes in recent times that attempt to record a kind of visual history of tree ornamentation for collectors.
      I have delivered a few lectures on the subject of Art and Christmas in St. Louis and the resource has been quite useful to me. For this reason plus the added bonus of being a novice collector myself, I will recommend the book. Snyder covers the information that should be known in general by those who are researching antique Christmas ornaments.

Similar Book Types to Consider:

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Miss Santa Claus

Miss Santa Claus
by Anonymous

With joyful heart, on dainty toes,
Her eyes ashine, each cheek a rose,
Well laden with her presents goes
The Christmas maid.

In Santa's task she claims a share,
And bears here gifts with thoughtful
care,
While Love attends her everywhere,
A willing aid.

Oh, Santa, take a friendly tip,
Unless you want to lose your grip,
Don't let her make another trip
In all your days. 

For she's a vision, so complete,
So captivating, fair and sweet,
That she has got you surely beat
A hundred ways.
 

Fill this festive Christmas stocking with doodles of all the toys you'd like for Christmas!

A bright red stocking needs to be filled with toys!



Katy Keene as Santa Claus...

Out of Katy's House
In the still of the night
Walked Katy Keene
And was she a shight!

From head to toe
She was dressed in Red
With a bag o'er her shoulders
And a cap on her head

From house to house
She left many toys
For all good little
Girls and Boys

The clock struck twelve
She was tired as could be
Her eyes were drooping
She could hardly see

When she got home
She went straight to bed
And the next morning
Everyone said

Katy is great!
Katy is Keene!

That's why she's
Our Santa
Fashion
Queen!

"When Love Came Down at Christmas"

"I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches." Revelation 22:16.

       "There cam out also at this time to meet them several of the King's trumpeters, clothed in white and shining raiment, who, with melodious voices and loud, made even the heavens to echo with their sound. These trumpeters saluted Christian and his fellow with ten thousand welcomes from the world, and this they did with shouting and sound of trumpet. This done, they compassed them round on every side; some went before, some behind, and some on the right hand, and some of the left, continually sounding as they went, with melodious noise, in notes on high; so that the very sight was to them that could behold it as if heaven itself was come down to meet them. Thus, therefore, they walked on together; and , as they walked, ever and anon these, even with joyful sound, would by mixing their music with looks and gestures, still signify to Christian and his brother how welcome they were into their company, and with what gladness they came to meet them. And now were these two men, as it were, in heaven, before they cam at it, being swallowed up with the sight of angels, and with hearing their melodious notes. Here, also, they had the city itself in view; and they thought they heard all the bells therein to ring, to welcome them thereto. But above all, the warm and joyful thoughts that they had about their own dwelling there with such company, and that forever and ever." Bunyan.


Point of Grace Sings "When Love Came Down"

Monday, July 22, 2013

"Born on Christmas Day" Crossword Puzzle

Above, a crossword puzzle about famous individuals who were born on Christmas day. Below is the answer key.


Santa Folding Puzzle

Christmas Puzzle. The idea is to fold the three Santa Clauses so that the middle Santa Claus will get the pack of the Santa Claus on the left and the cane of the Santa Claus on the right. Also make two of the Santa Clauses disappear in the folding.

"Guess The Gifts" Fill in The Blanks Puzzle

These Christmas shoppers have purchased gifts for their family members.
 Fill in the blanks with the gifts that are to be given to every family member.
 A clue is pictured on the left to help you guess.

"Old Fashioned Christmas Toys" Word Search

Print this Christmas Toys Word Search for a party or fun activity during the month of December. It should take at least 30 minutes for crossword enthusiasts to complete, perhaps even an hour. There is one old-fashioned Christmas toy hidden inside the Word Search that is not on the listing. You can give bonus points for the first person to find it! (Wooden Jigsaw Puzzle)

"Here Comes Santa Claus" Word Search Puzzle

Print this Christmas word search puzzle for your next holiday party. This puzzle should take approximately 30 to 45 minutes to complete.

"Advent" Word Search Puzzle

Search for vocabulary related to Advent in this puzzle. The above puzzle is difficult
so if you do not enjoy word search puzzles it can be quite frustrating.


Here is another Advent word search that is quicker to search.

...And here is the simplest version of an Advent Word Search that has no diagonals in it.

"Christmas Gifts that Give Joy to All" Puzzle

Search for clues to unscramble this Christmas puzzle in the NIV version of the Bible.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Santa Writes Back!


      If children should write to Santa with such ardent devotion, it seems only right and proper that he would write them back after a brief but productive visit to their home. Santa can leave this little "thank you" a holiday observation of his own after consuming cookies and milk. He will, of course, use an old-fashioned quill pen in order to write the note properly, "Santa style." This letter will make a charming addition to your child's scrap book. Your little ones can then look back on many a past Christmas and read about their wishes and special family memories. Include snap-shots of their tree, pet, and surprised expressions as they tear into gifts, giggle at the breakfast table and prepare for that special Christmas event at church.

Letters to Santa 100 Years Ago

These little letters to Santa were sent by their parents to the Monroe City Democrat on December 13, 1900. I thought my readers might like to read about what children wished to receive from Santa over 100 years ago in this country.
The above letters appeared in the Mexico Missouri Message on December 10, 1914.

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Unscramble These Christmas Phrases

Here is a difficult Christmas word scramble to challenge adults and older teens; the answer key is below.

Can you stuff this stocking?

Here boys and girls is a picture puzzle which will help you to pass some of these long evenings while waiting for Santa Claus to com. The Times (newspaper) wants all of the boys and girls who read the Times to try and solve this puzzle. This is how to do it: Cut out all the gifts in the right hand square along the black lines, then, paste them in the stocking at the left, so that none overlaps, yet all are in the stocking. Can you do it?

Who owns these stockings?

Can you help Santa figure out the names of the children who own each stocking? There are three boys and three girls whose names are scrambled on top of each stocking. Fill in the spaces provided for each child's name.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Woodland Christmas Ornaments

       Woodland Christmas themes  often include bird fowl and small furry animals; here are just a few of the owls that I hang on my woodland themed Christmas tree every year. 
My little woodland owl ornaments are made of a wide selection of materials. Feathers, cones, seeds twigs crepe paper, mouth blown glass and even carved semi-precious stone are just a few of the materials used by those artists and craft companies that have contributed to my collection. I am particularly fond of owls.

A little woodland squirrel nibbling on an acorn. This little guy is made from cotton batting and dryer lint. He's finished off with a little rabbit fur in back to imitate a tail.

 Here is another woodland ornament tutorial mimicking a hornet nest.
 
I saved a preserved European queen hornet to attach to my woodland ornament.


Karen Snow shares her woodland Christmas ornament collection.

More Links To Woodland Christmas Ornaments: