Ideas for making handmade Christmas presents By GAIL MILLER Creativehomemaking.com How many times when Christmas comes along do we end up spending a fortune on gifts for friends and family, which are not the least bit personal, and regretting it afterwards? These days we often seem to get caught up in a rush to spend as much as possible on commercialised products when in fact we could save money and give much better presents if only we applied ourselves to hand making them. Here I bring you a selection of lovely gifts which are easy to make and will certainly not break the bank. The recipients will love the fact that you have put your own time and effort into making the gifts and will treasure them. 1) Personalized Recipe Book If one of your recipients is a vegetarian or has a penchant for curry, loves anything with tomatoes in or is a sucker for chocolate, make use of the fact by making a personalized recipe book. Start collecting appropriate recipes from books or magazines and purchase a small, inexpensive book to write them in. Copy them out in your neatest handwriting or use calligraphy if you are talented. If you have artistic flair, you can also include illustrations! What a delight this would be to the avid /LIH The Epoch Times 'HFHPEHU B3 Inexpensive, Handmade, Original Christmas Gifts cook or foodlover. 2) Homemade Stationery You need ordinary envelopes and cheap cartridge paper or newsprint. Now go through all your magazines and cut out decorative pictures or illustrations. Stick them to the fronts of the envelopes down the left or across the top. If possible stick matching borders or motifs on to the paper too. If you cannot get them to match, not to worry, just try to get illustrations with a matching colorway. 3) Chocolate Spoons Buy a pack of plastic picnic spoons. These are very cheap and you can get literally dozens in a pack (enough to make all your presents!) Melt some chocolate with a knob of butter in a dish stood in a pan of boiling water. When the chocolate is runny dip the spoons up to where the handle starts into the chocolate. Place on greaseproof paper to dry then wrap with cellophane wrap and finish with a pretty bow. To add flavor you can add liqueurs, mint, or coffee, orange or vanilla flavoring to the melted chocolate mix. 4) Dress Up Box for Kids You have to start this present halfway through the year as you can add to it as you go along. Obtain a large cardboard box from your local supermarket and cover it with pretty wrapping paper. If desired stick a large label on the front with the name of the recipient on it. Every time you go into town, browse round the charity shops and pick up cheap hats, scarves, veils, tutus, jewellery, gloves and small size dresses or jackets. Kids will go mad for something like this and you can tailor the clothing to a girl or a boy. 5) Santa’s Sweeties Instead of buying the kiddies selection boxes which are just a collection of chocolate bars packed together and grossly overpriced, why not build up a store of regular chocolate bars or packets of sweets throughout the year. Every time you visit the supermarket add a couple to your basket. Come Christmas time, divide the sweets between how many children you are catering for, into pretty bags made out of wrapping paper. Decorate with ribbons & bows. You will save a fortune! 6) Calligraphy Get a book on calligraphy from the library and make personalized gifts by writing a poem, or if you are not that confident, the recipient’s name on delicately colored paper or card. Add a pressed flower or two and mount in a bargain frame. 7) Personalized Towels A set of cheap white hand towels can be made unique by the addition of colored ribbon or braid sewn approx. 3 inches from each end. Make them extra special by attaching the initials of the recipients with some scrap fabric and Bondaweb. Practical and customized! 8) Decorated Coffee Jar Don’t throw out your coffee, jam or pickle jars, especially if they are those really beautifully shaped ones that you get nowadays. All you need are some sequins or diamantes, which cost literally pennies from haberdashers. Stick them on at Fast, Fun and Easy Christmas Decorating Ideas By CAT ROONEY (SRFK7LPHV6WDൠ By LESLEY DIETSCHY Creativehomemaking.com Decorating your home for the holidays does not need be stressful or expensive. Being one of the most popular times of the year to decorate, get your family involved and have fun making your home beautiful for the holiday season. Here are fifteen Christmas decorating ideas: 1. Display your favorite Christmas collections. If you don’t have a collection, now is a great time to start! My son and I collect nutcrackers and every year we have a wonderful time selecting just the right one. With a permanent marker, I write the year on the bottom of the nutcracker. Not only do we enjoy looking at the nutcrackers during the holidays, we also enjoying the fond memories of selecting them. 2. Make simple bows out of Christmas ribbons and attach them to your curtains with pins. This is a very charming look. 3. Decorate your houseplants by hanging small Christmas ornaments on them. 4. Place a collection of Christmas books on your coffee table. 5. Fill a glass bowl with pinecones and Christmas balls and place on a shelf or table. 6. Wrap your staircase banister with indoor Christmas lights, garland, and bows. 7. To add scent throughout your home, tie 5 or 6 cinnamon sticks together in a bundle using Christmas ribbon. Make as many bundles as you wish and place around your home in baskets or bowls. 8. To decorate your table tie Christmas ribbon to the stems of glasses and/or handles of cutlery. 9. To dress up your chairs tie Christmas bows around the chair so that the bow is on the back of the chair. 10. Using a small brush or q-tip, paint the edges of pinecones with glittery gold craft paint. After the pinecones dry, place them in a decorative basket. 11. Add Christmas garland to doorframes, window frames and mirrors. You can use tape to secure the garland to the surfaces. 12. Tie bows around doorknobs using festive and colorful Christmas ribbon. 13. Attach garland and Christmas bows to your chandelier. You can also weave strings of red beads in the garland that will dangle down from your chandelier and reflect the light, which will add sparkle. 14. If you live in a milder climate, consider decorating with Amaryllis plants. These beautiful plants come in red and white, grow tall, and provide a very elegant random and glue a label to the front with “coffee,” “spice,” “pasta,” or anything else which the jar might be utilized for storing. Tie a silver or gold bow round the neck of the jar. 9) Hand Decorated Ceramics If you are artistic, why not purchase a set of plain white ceramic egg cups, tea cups or plain glasses which are extremely inexpensive. Using a bottle of ceramic paint decorate by hand or stencil or stamp on each one to make them unique. If possible find out before hand the color scheme preferred. 10) Flavoured Cooking Oil Save empty oil or vinegar bottles throughout the year, or buy the plain corked ones you can by extremely cheaply at thrift stores. Half fill with peanut or olive oil. Add twigs of Rosemary, Thyme, Basil, Oregano, Parsley etc. If desired also add some peppercorns for decoration and further flavor and then fill bottle with more oil. Lid or cork and add a pretty ribbon to the neck of the bottle. Not only will these look great on any recipient’s kitchen shelf they will also enhance their cooking! 11) Giant Cookies Instead of making lots of ordinary size biscuits, why not make one or two giant personalized ones? Make a large batch of biscuit mix using a recipe from a book, but instead of using regular size cookie cutters, use an 8 inch cake tin to make the shape or make a paper template of a heart can cut the shape round that. Cook and cool, then decorate with icing using the recipients name. Wrap FAVORITE COLLECTIBLES: An assortment of &KULVWPDVൣJXUHVFUHDWHDORYHO\GHFRUDWLQJ display. SANDRA SHIELDS/THE EPOCH TIMES look. 15. Don’t forget to decorate your fireplace mantle and hang your Christmas stockings. A few fireplace mantledecorating ideas are adding garland, different styles and sizes of Santa’s, teddy bears, and candles. You can also display your favorite nativity scene if you have a large enough mantle. Be creative with your fireplace mantle because most mantels are the focal point during the holiday season. Another decorating idea for your mantel is to purchase a bunch of miniature rosemary trees shaped like Christmas trees, add mini ornaments to them and line them up across your mantle. These miniature rosemary trees are readily available during the holidays and come in festive containers. Christmas decorating is a great time to create traditions and spend quality time with your family. Get out some snacks and drinks and create a little “decorating party” that your family will love and look forward to year after year. Happy Holidays! Lesley Dietschy is a writer, jewelry designer, and the founder of www.HomeDecorExchange.com CREATIVE OPTIONS: Red and white quilt; bath salts in a pretty box; painted ceramic plate and mug; and a Christmas pudding in a decorative tin. SANDRA SHIELDS/THE EPOCH TIMES in cellophane. 12) A Set of Fridge Magnets Decide who you are going to give fridge magnets to earlier on in the year and take some photos of either the person or their children. Make small squares or circles out of cardboard and stick the photos onto the card. Finish by attaching small magnets to the backs. 13) Home Made Honey Bath Oil Mix together a cup of light baby or olive oil with 1/2 a cup of honey, 1/2 a cup of liquid soap and a drop each of your favorite essential oil. Mix together gently and decant into a pretty a squirt bottle. 14) Home Cooked Delights When you make your traditional Christmas Cake, double or treble the quantities of ingredients. Make extra cakes which you can decorate with gold or silver ribbon round the outside, and give to relatives. 15) Personalized Photo Album Photograph albums can be picked up very cheaply, especially when sold together in bulk; i.e. three or five sets cellophaned together. Cover the albums with pretty fabric or lace and stencil the recipient’s initials on the front to personalize it. 16) Home Made ‘Throw’ Throws, which are very much in fashion these days, are very expensive to buy. A large remnant, or a number of them patchworked together and edged with fringing, makes an excellent and unique throw. A delightful and unique present! Merry Christmas! Gail Miller is a writer and artist. Her websites include “Stage Your Home To Sell” and “Cash For Crafts.” gails_galleryuk@yahoo. co.uk. Pears for the Holidays Caramelized French Toast with Vanilla Pears Traditionally, pears are 3 Tbsp butter known as autumn fruit, but 3 large ripe Bartlett pears, the different varieties of trees peeled, cored and sliced actually bear edibles from 1/4 cup brown sugar August through May. Pears 1/2 tsp vanilla extract grown in California, such as Bartlett, Bosc, and D’anjou Caramelized French Toast are abundant for the purchas2 eggs ing in the winter months for 2/3 cup half and half 1 tbsp holiday dishes and snacks. sugar Experts advise that pears are ¼ tsp cinnamon best gathered while green to 2 tbsp butter ripen indoors at room tem2 tbsp brown sugar perature and after ripening be Vanilla bean ice cream placed in the refrigerator (to 1 1/4-inch thick slices chalFRUIT CENTERPIECE: Bartlett Pears make a slow down ripening). If left to lah bread (or other sweet egg beautiful centerpiece until they are ready to turn yellow on the tree, the fruit bread) be eaten. CAT ROONEY/THE EPOCH TIMES gets gritty in texture. Allow 4 Melt butter in a medium to 6 days for green firm pears skillet. Add pears, brown to ripen at room temperature. The Don’t forget the relishes, composts, sugar and vanilla. Simmer over mein between stages are when the pears salsas, and salads with pears. Even dium-high heat for 2 to 3 minutes are turning green to yellow and los- pizza can have pear bites as a top- until pears are tender. Remove from ing firmness. Count on them to be ping. Is you mouth watering yet? heat and carefully remove pears ready to eat in 2 to 3 days. When the Here are recipes from the California from pan with a slotted spoon. Let pears are golden yellow, they are at Pear Advisory Board to try out for pears stand for a few minutes, then perfection and the most flavorful, the season. drain any juices into skillet. Place ripest, and juiciest. skillet back over medium-high heat Once the fruit is ripened it be- Quick Pear Snacks and cook for about 4 to 5 minutes, comes a decision of how many indiCut unpeeled fresh Bartlett pears stirring constantly, until sauce is vidual pears to eat as a fruit snack into wedges, dip one end in honey thickened and caramelized. Remove and how many are needed to make and dip in chopped toasted nuts, from heat and set aside. To prepare fresh delicious pear dishes. Some of roasted sunflower seeds, coconut or French toast, beat eggs, half-andus remember eating Mom’s peeled chocolate sprinkles. half, sugar, vanilla and cinnamon and baked pears with sugar, wain a large shallow bowl. Add bread ter, and red hot cinnamon candies. Peppermint Pears slices and let soak for about 2 minOthers remember Grandmother’s Cook whole, cored fresh Bartlett utes to absorb mixture. Turn and let canned pears, pear butter, preserves pears in light syrup, flavored with stand 2 minutes more. Melt butter or jams. Today’s cookbooks, home fresh mint sprigs or mint extract in a large skillet. Sprinkle 1/2 tablemagazines and even on the internet until tender. Chill. Serve with re- spoon brown sugar on each side of have recipes to make the next gener- maining syrup spooned over pears. bread. Cook over medium-high heat ation’s childhood memories of either Garnish with dollop of sour cream for about 2 to 3 minutes per side untraditional or new style revisions of and grated chocolate or chocolate til crisp, being careful not to burn pear dishes for the holidays. the sugar. Transfer to plates and syrup and whipped cream. There are recipes for pear and top with pears, caramel sauce and a cranberry pie with caramel sauce Baked Pears small scoop of ice cream. drizzled on top, pies, cobblers, Prep time: 20 minutes and cook Fill center of cored fresh Bartlett cakes, and cookies for those with a pear halves with a mixture of blue time: About 15 minutes. (Makes 4 sweet tooth. Then there are the dif- cheese, cream cheese and chopped servings.) Nutrients Per Serving: ferent meats (pork tenderloin, ham, nuts. Bake at 350 degrees F until Calories 500; Protein 9 g; Fat 21 g; lamb, pork chops, duck, chicken, fruit is tender when pierced with a Carbohydrate 70 g; Cholesterol 175 and sea food) cooked with pears. fork. mg; Fiber 4 g; Sodium 370 mg
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