Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Christmas Coupon for Mending And Sewing


      Do you have a special talent with a needle and a thread? You could give that skill as a gift for the upcoming holiday season. Gifts don't need to be a product; you can share the gift of your time or talents with those in need of a little extra attention. Many times members of my extended family ask me for sewing favors. They need a button sewn on or a zipper repaired etc... So I set aside a little time within the season to make these kinds of simple repairs to their clothing while they relax and watch a ball game or talk over coffee. You can slip this little coupon inside a card or stocking to serve as a reminder that you are willing to help someone with your sewing talents as well.

Christmas Coupons for Coffee and Donuts

Coupon for coffee and commiseration, black and white.

Give the gift of good coffee and candid conversation this Christmas. It is both affordable and will build solid relationships.

Coupon for coffee and donuts, black and white.

Christmas Coupons for A New Set of Tires

Full of Life tire coupon, vertical in black and white.

      Clip and print one of these coupons to stuff into a special gift for your adult child for Christmas. The gift of safety on the open road is by far superior to make-up or DVDs! In our home, several of the retired adults prefer to give more practical gifts for Christmas. For many years I have both received this gift personally and have also seen other very needy folks awarded the same kindness by those family members who have more lucrative incomes.

Survive the Open Road tire coupon, horizontal in black and white.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

A Christmas Gift Tag Just for Dad!

Here's a little gift tag just for Dad; print it out and decorate his gifts for Christmas this year!

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Dressing The Tree in 1902

This old illustration from 1870,
Harper's Bazaar depicts real candles
attached to a living Christmas tree.
How it May Be Done to Secure The Best Effects

      The Woman's Home Companion gives some hints on decorating a Christmas tree safely. It is well known that when tapers are fixed to the laden branches, after the gifts are taken off the lightened boughs spring up and often set each other on fire. The mode indicated here avoids all that. 
      "First," says the Companion, "thin cut the branches sufficiently to allow the gifts to show to good advantage. Then with an auger bore holes in a spiral row about four or five inches apart the whole length of the trunk. Have some flat sticks prepared, an inch wide and half an inch thick, and of varing lengths. Sharpen one end, and insert them according to their graduated lengths, giving each a blow or two with a hammer to insure its being firmly fixed. Paint them green. At the outer end the candle holder is firmly fixed."
      To the topmost branch before the tree is put up, affix the "Christ-child" --the winged doll, secured by slight rubber bands under the wings. Gilt paper stars and crescents are pretty, affixed here and there to the boughs. Gay silk and tarleton bags full of nuts and candy, oranges and apples, bundles of stick candy tied with ribbons, little baskets and cornucopias of figs and raisins, gilded walnuts, popcorn balls, strings of popcorn and cranberries, candy canes, paper chains--all these and other things they will suggest will decorate a tree so prettily that the children for whose pleasure it is constructed will forget, in their delight, that it is not weighted down with costly gifts. The Banner-Democrat. (Lake Providence, East Carroll Parish, La.), 25 Dec. 1902.

Decorating Early Christmas Trees: