| Christmas is coming and
you've got a million things to do! We're here to help. We have 101 Easy
Ways to Decorate for Christmas. These ideas are all quite simple, but they'll
will give you lots of quick, easy, inexpensive ways to add some Christmas
cheer to your home. |
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1. |
Create a charming display of teddy bears dressed for the season.
Gather together three or more teddy bears and arrange them on a table or
on the floor in a corner. Dress the bears with touques, scarves and mittens.
Place candy canes in their hands or tie bows around their necks. You can
even wrap up some small, empty boxes with Christmas wrapping paper to place
in the bears' hands. |
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2. |
Make simply bows from Christmas print ribbon and pin them
to your curtains. |
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3. |
Display a collection of nativity scenes from different cultures.
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4. |
Hang a collection of Christmas stocking on your mantle, a
shelf or the wall (even if you don't stuff them). The more the merrier.
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5. |
Revisit your childhood. Cut snowflakes from white paper and
hang them in all of your windows. |
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6. |
Use red and green 3-dimensional fabric paints to trace simple
Christmas patterns (like stars, bells, Santas, stockings, etc.) on a white
tablecloth. Click here to print out our basic Christmas
shapes. |
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7. |
Buy a clear plastic shower curtain. Use a hot glue gun to
attach Christmas decorations to the outside of the curtain. Don't use breakable
ornaments - instead, try small wooden or plastic ornaments (remove any hooks),
bows, garland, etc. |
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8. |
Dress up your house plants - hang small Christmas ornaments
on them. |
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9. |
Tie a red ribbon around a tall, slim drinking glass. Fill
the glass with candy canes and display on a shelf or side table.
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10. |
Fill a small glass bowl or decorative Christmas bowl with
small cones and display on end tables, shelves, buffet tables, etc.
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11. |
Purchase plain green or red place mats and attach Christmas
ribbons, bows or small wooden ornaments with a hot glue gun.
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12. |
For quick ornaments, hang Christmas cookie cutters with ribbon.
Hang them on your tree or in a window.
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13. |
Decorate plain red, white, green or gold candles with 3-dimensional
fabric paint. Draw stars, bells, angels, snowmen, etc. If you make a mistake,
let the paint dry and peal it off, then start again.
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14. |
Create a cookie wreath centerpiece for your table. Just arrange
Christmas cookies in a wreath shape right on the table cloth. No need to
attach them to anything 'cause everyone will want to nibble at them. If
you like, place a pillar candle on a small plate in the center of the wreath.
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15. |
Pile a collection of Christmas books on a side table.
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16. |
Purchase an inexpensive mail box. Spray paint it red or green.
Use craft paints to add simple Christmas shapes (use
our patterns), or attach store-bought ornaments with a hot glue gun
(make sure your ornaments will be able to stand up to the elements).
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17. |
If you have a large, bare outside wall, try this simple idea.
Cut a Christmas silhouette from a piece of plywood (a silhouette of Santa,
a snowman, etc works well). Using screws, attach your silhouette to a short
post that you can drive into the ground. You'll want the silhouette to stand
right a ground level several feet away from the wall. Position a spot light
on the other side of the silhouette so that it will shine on the silhouette
and project a large shadow on the wall. We've seen this done with a silhouette
of Joseph leading Mary who is sitting on a donkey. It's beautiful.
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18. |
Wrap indoor Christmas lights around a railing or banister.
Secure periodically with tape. Be careful to tape down the electrical cord
so that no one trips over it.
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19. |
Add color to a room with vases of red and white flowers. Use
roses, carnations, mums, daisies, etc. Or, float the flowers in large crystal
or glass bowls.
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20. |
Wrap an assortment of medium to large sized boxes with Christmas
wrap. Attach ribbons and/or bows. Pile the boxes in a corner from floor
to ceiling.
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21. |
Sew scraps of Christmas print fabric into a patchwork tablecloth.
Simply cut your fabric into square pieces and stitch together. Hem the entire
cloth. Sew ribbon the edges, if you like. Make smaller cloths to cover end
tables, night tables, TV trays, shelving, etc.
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22. |
Cover an end table or a shelf with white paper. Arrange cut
evergreen boughs on to cover the table top. Place tall tapered candles in
glass candleholders here and there on the table top. Before lighting candles,
be sure that the greenery is not close enough to catch fire.
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23. |
Use pliers to bend coat hangers into a simple wire-frame tree
shape. Wrap a string of outdoor Christmas light around the frame, attaching
with electrical tape or duct tape. Stick the decoration in a flower bed
or on your front lawn.
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24. |
Hang mistletoe everywhere. Use false or fresh mistletoe.
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25. |
Wrap your doors in Christmas wrapping paper and attach large
bows make from fabric or purchased at your local craft store.
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26. |
String a ribbon from one end of a wall to another. Attach
the ribbon to the wall (at each corner) with thumbtacks. Clip Christmas
cards to the ribbon with clothespins. If the ribbon is too long, the weight
of the cards will pull it off the wall, so tack it here and there with more
thumbtacks.
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37. |
Purchase a large glass plate. Paint the underside of the plate
with gold craft paint. Dry. Place the plate on a table and fill with several
white or off-white pillar candles of varying sizes.
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28. |
Make basic sugar cookies or gingerbread cookies. Before baking,
make a hole toward the top of each cookie using a straw. Bake and cool.
String a ribbon through each cookie and hang them on your Christmas tree.
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29. |
String popcorn, cranberries, cereal, beads, etc. and hang
the garlands everywhere.
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30. |
Make some old-fashioned tree decorations. Wrap nuts with aluminum
foil; use a needle and thread to stitch a thread through the foil for hanging.
Glue ribbon to pine cones for hanging. String popcorn streamers. Make paper
chains. Cut snowflakes from white paper.
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46. |
Add a few drops of food coloring to white glue. Put the glue
into a squeeze bottle or icing piping bag. Draw simple Christmas star outlines
on waxed paper. Pipe glue onto the paper, following your drawn outlines.
Dry. Peel glue ornaments off of the waxed paper and hang in windows with
thread or ribbon.
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32. |
Cut pictures out of old Christmas cards and create a collage
by gluing them onto a piece of poster board. You can frame the poster board
if you like or simply hang it on the wall.
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33. |
Wrap a lampshade with translucent Christmas tissue paper.
Put the paper on the outside of the lamp shape, overlapping the edges just
a little and tape the edges down on the inside. Be careful that the tissue
paper doesn't come too close to the light bulb or it may catch fire.
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34. |
Replace your fish tank background mural with a piece of Christmas
wrapping paper or a collage made out of pictures cut from Christmas cards.
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35. |
Twist garland or popcorn strings around railings or banisters
and secure here and there with tape.
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36. |
Using a glue gun, glue candy canes, side-by-side (standing
on end with their hooks at the top) to the outside of a terra cotta pot.
Tie a red ribbon around the pot. Place a small poinsettia inside the pot
or fill the pot with wrapped candy.
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37. |
Tape a doily to the outside of a glass canister or clean glass
mayonnaise jar. Spray the outside of the container with artificial snow.
Dry. Remove the doily. Fill the container with cookies, candy, ornaments,
etc.
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38. |
Remove your favorite pictures from their frames. Wrap the
frames with Christmas wrap and replace the pictures.
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39. |
Make a gingerbread house. They make wonderful centerpieces
or decorations for any table top.
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40. |
Use scraps of Christmas print fabric to create quick sachets.
Place two pieces of fabric right sides together. Pin a paper pattern of
a Christmas shape to the fabric (use our basic patterns).
Cut the shape out of both layers of fabric. Stitch the fabric layers together
all along the edge, leaving a one inch gap. Turn the sachet right side out.
Fill the sachet with potpourri. Hand stitch the gap closed. Place your sachets
in a basket by the front door so you can hand them to departing guests (meanwhile,
they'll fill your entryway with wonderful scent).
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41. |
Use a child's Christmas pop-up book as a centerpiece. Just
open the book up to a desirable picture and place the open book in the center
of your table.
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42. |
Hang a large December wall calendar on your wall. Count down
the days to Christmas by gluing a brightly-colored bow on each passing day.
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43. |
Tie five or six cinnamon sticks into a bundle using red ribbon.
Create a bunch of these bundles and display them in a bowl or on a plate.
Or, tuck bundles into nooks and crannies on shelves and table. They add
a nice scent to your room.
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44. |
Pull out your old toy trains. Run the track around the perimeter
of the Christmas tree.
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45. |
Paint the inside of a glass white to simulate milk. Display
the glass along with a plate full of cookies and a hand-written Santa's
wish list. It looks great if you take a bite or two out of one cookies.
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46. |
For easy Christmas tableware, tie red, green, or gold ribbons
to the stems of wine glasses or the handles of cutlery.
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47. |
To make a decorative cookie plate, glue cinnamon sticks and
whole cloves to the edges of a large plate.
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48. |
Cut pictures from Christmas cards and Christmas wrap. Decoupage
the pictures to the inside of a serving tray. Be sure to cover the entire
surface of the tray. Once all the pictures are in place, cover the entire
inside surface of the tray with one or two more layers of decoupage medium.
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49. |
Screw small hooks into the ceiling and hang indoor Christmas
lights from them.
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50. |
Print your favorite cookie recipe on Christmas stationary
(or print it on a white piece of paper and have it photo copied onto Christmas
stationary). Roll each recipe up like a scroll. Tie the scroll with ribbon.
Place the scrolls in a basked by your front door so you can give them to
departing guests. You could also bake up a batch of cookies. Wrap each cookie
separately in plastic wrap and attach one cookie to each scroll with ribbon
(string the ribbon through a hole in the plastic wrap).
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51. |
To add a lot of color to a room quickly, use red or green
towels, blankets or even scraps of fabric as throws for your chairs, couch,
tables, etc. Large pieces of polar fleece make great, cuddly throws.
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52. |
Display colored glass ball ornaments or even beads in bowls
instead of hanging them on your tree.
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53. |
Wash and dry half a dozen small jars (it's better if they're
all different sizes and shapes). Fill each jar 2/3 full of water and add
a couple of drops of red or green food coloring to each jar. Stir. Place
one sprig of evergreen in each jar and display the jars in a group on a
table or line them up in a row on a shelf or window sill.
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54. |
Use children's bath crayons (for coloring in the bathtub)
to draw Christmas decorations on your mirrors and windows.
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55. |
Spray paint the outside of large, clean coffee cans with gold,
red or green paint and use them as cookie cannisters. Once painted, you
can decorate further by using decoupage medium to glue Christmas card cutouts
to the cans, or use a hot glue gun to attach small plastic or wooden ornaments,
tinsel, garland, whole spices etc.
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56. |
Using a small brush, paint the tips of pine cones with gold
craft paint. Place on a rack or piece of waxed paper to dry. Display cones
in bowls or vases or attach a ribbon and hang them on your tree.
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57. |
Spruce up plain red or green bath towels with Christmas ribbon
attached using a hot glue gun or ironed on with fusible web.
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58. |
Create an easy wall hanging using a piece of sheet music for
a Christmas carol. Cut a piece of red poster board a few inches larger than
the sheet music and glue the music to the center of the poster board. Use
a hot glue gun to glue a small sprig of artificial holly to the top right-hand
corner of the sheet music.
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59. |
Create an inexpensive set of Christmas glassware. Purchase
a set of glasses or mugs and paint holly leaves and berries on the outside
of each glass or mug using red and green glass paint.
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60. |
Dress up your dinner table: cover the table with a plain red,
green or white tablecloth and sprinkle with red, green or gold cut-outs
from your party decorations store. Or, make your own cuts out with specially
shaped hole punches and solid colored wrapping paper.
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61. |
Turn an old blanket chest into a treasure chest. Place the
chest on the floor against a wall and open the lid (prop the lid up securely
if it's prone to closing by itself). Line the inside of the chest with fiber
fill to create the illusion of snow. Drape strings of beads and white indoor
Christmas lights over the chest. Fill the chest with wrapped presents or
wrapped empty boxes. Sprinkle with gold-wrapped chocolate coins.
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62. |
Create personalized gingerbread men as place cards for your
dining table. Use colored icing to decorate each gingerbread man with a
guest's hair color and usual clothing. Using icing to print each person's
name across the chest of the gingerbread man.
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63. |
Paint a terra cotta flower pot gold using craft paint. Let
paint dry. Glue on plastic or glass "gems". Let glue dry. Pipe white glue
in a circle around the perimeter of each "gem". While the glue is still
wet, sprinkle on gold sparkles. Let glue dry. Fill pots with flowers, nuts
or candy.
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64. |
Create an eclectic centerpiece using a large glass plate.
Place a collection of containers on the plate. Use small bowls, vases, candle
holders, flower pots, clean ash trays, etc. Fill each container with a different
type of nut or candy.
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65. |
Purchase inexpensive plain lampshades for your lamps. Use
a hot glue gun to attach fabric bows (in Christmas prints) to the shades.
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66. |
Trim door frames, window frames and the edges of mirrors with
Christmas garland (secure with tape).
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67. |
Place 1/2 cup of whole cloves on a plate. Apply white glue
to the outside of a small terra cotta flower pot. Roll the pot in the cloves
so that the outside of the pot is completely covered with cloves. You may
have to press more cloves onto the pot in places. Let the glue dry. Tie
a red ribbon around the outside of the pot - knot the ribbon. Tie three
cinnamon sticks into the ribbon (knot the ribbon around the sticks). Tie
the ends of the ribbon into a bow. Use the pot as a flower pot or fill it
with potpourri.
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68. |
Decorate with mittens, gloves, touques and scarves. String
jute cord from one end of a room to another and clip knit items to the cord
with clothespins.
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69. |
Purchase small bells from your craft store. Tie each bell
to a piece of ribbon between 6" and 18" in length. Gather all of the ribbons
together and knot together at the top. Drape the bells over a door knob
so that they ring when someone enters or exits.
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70. |
Poinsettias are a beautiful way to add Christmas color to
a room. But don't just stop at one. Create a stunning display using at least
six plants - all different sizes. Group them together, larger plants in
the back. Tie a large gold fabric ribbon around the whole group of pots.
Sprinkle the plants with gold glitter.
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71. |
Wrap a large empty coffee can in Christmas wrapping paper
(leave the top open). Place and the floor, add some water and fill with
evergreen branches. This looks wonderful on its own, or you can hang ornaments
from the branches.
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72. |
Replace your usual curtain valence with a large piece of Christmas
print fabric, draped over your curtain rod.
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73. |
Tie bows around door knobs.
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74. |
Create an easy wreath. Tear Christmas print fabric into strips
(or use ribbon, instead). Wrap a styrofoam wreath with the fabric or ribbon.
Hang the wreath as is, or hot glue Christmas picks, ornaments, nuts, candies,
etc. to it.
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75. |
Wrap a table in Christmas wrapping paper.
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76. |
Purchase cork place mats or coasters, Christmas print stamps
and red/green/gold stamp pads. Then, stamp shapes onto your coasters and
place mats. You can even stamp shapes onto your table cloths and napkins.
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77. |
Cut pictures of people and objects from Christmas cards. Glue
each object to a magnet sheet. Cut the pictures out of the magnet sheet.
Stick the magnets to your fridge. Visitors can arrange your magnets into
scenes.
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78. |
Put some color into your bathroom. Display red and green glycerin
soaps, bath gels and oils.
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79. |
Use florist wire to wire Christmas picks to railings, banisters
and door knobs.
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80. |
Make a snowman. Better yet, make a whole snow family or even
a whole snow village!
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81. |
Wrap your front door in plain white paper and decorate with
a large bow. Place red and green pens by the front door and have guest sign
the door as they leave your home.
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82. |
Cut pictures from Christmas cards and pin them to your curtains
or bedspread.
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83. |
Purchase inexpensive white bathroom accessories (soap dish,
toothbrush holder, garbage can, etc.). Paint holly leaves and red berries
on the accessories using craft paints. Or, use a hot glue gun to attach
bows, sequins, beads, buttons, etc.
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84. |
Create an red and green display in your kitchen using a collection
standard food items. Jars of olives, sun dried tomatoes, pickles, red peppers,
cans with red or green labels.
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85. |
Quick wreath: Use a glue gun to attach nuts or wrapped candies
to a styrofoam wreath. Attach a large red ribbon.
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86. |
Paint nuts gold with craft paint (use a variety of nuts of
different shape). Line a large bowl or basket with Christmas greenery (artificial
or real), fill the bowl wit oranges, apples and the gold nuts. Add a large
red bow.
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87. |
Display a large collection of photos from Christmases past.
This makes a sensational conversation piece. Use a collection of odd frames
or create frames using colored cardboard or craft foam. Instead of displaying
each picture individually, you can create a collage. Use a large piece of
red craft foam. Cut photos into interesting shapes (just cut around what's
important in the photos). Glue the photos to the foam, overlapping them
and leaving a 1" - 2" border of red foam showing. Cut holly leaves from
green craft foam. Glue three leaves to each corner of the red foam frame.
Cut small circles from left-over red foam (these are the holly berries).
Glue them next to the holly leaves.
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88. |
Make a Christmas bedspread. Trim the edges of a large piece
of red polar fleece with pinking shears. Stitch a collection of mittens
to one side of the fleece.
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89. |
Put a Christmas screen saver on your computer.
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90. |
Paint Christmas stars or bells on the outside of your bathtub
or on your shower curtain using washable children's soap crayons.
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91. |
Place a plate full of wrapped Christmas baking by the front
door as parting gifts for guests.
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92. |
Remove your mugs from their cup hooks and hang Christmas ornaments
in their place. You can do the same thing with spoon racks or key racks.
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93. |
Shred colored paper and use it to line a basket. Fill the
basket with red and green scented votive candles.
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94. |
Make a fresh flower garland using red carnations. You'll need
a few dozen carnations. Cut the stems off just below the bud. String a length
of double thread on a needle (make the thread as long as the garland you
want to make). String the buds together by pushing the needle through the
bud and out the top of the flower. Tie the ends of the garland together,
if you wish. This garland should be stored in the fridge.
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95. |
Decorate with giant cookies. Mix up your favorite sugar cookie
or gingerbread cookie recipe. Roll out the dough. Instead of cutting into
small cookies, cut out one tree shaped cookie using a knife. Don't bother
using a pattern. A hand-cut shape has more charm. Transfer to a cookie sheet
and bake. Cool. Cover with icing made of confectioner's sugar, green food
coloring and water (no butter). While the icing is still wet, decorate your
tree with peppermint candies, M & M's, jujubes, etc. Let the icing set. Your
giant cookie can be displayed on a plate or you can wrap up a box in colored
foil wrap and glue your cookie to the front of the box with dollops of icing.
The box can be displayed lying down or standing on end.
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96. |
Make simple Christmas puppets. Cut Santas, angels, snowmen,
etc. from old Christmas cards. Paint craft stick red or green. Attach one
cut-out to each stick using tape. The kids can play with these or, you can
display them in a vase or a bowl. Just fill the vase or bowl with beads,
nuts, candies, etc. and stick the puppets' sticks into the bowl.
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97. |
Wrap your plant pots in red or green foil wrap. You don't
even have to remove the plants first.
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98. |
Create a display by your front door with unused boots. Assemble
a group of boots and fill them with wrapped gifts or empty boxes.
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99. |
Purchase an inexpensive glass vase (or better yet, three or
four vases). "Paint" the vase with white glue and roll in red or green sparkles.
Use the vase to display a large collection of white or red carnations.
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100. |
To create an easy Christmas card display, purchase a large
red bow that has a vertical ribbon attached. Hang the bow and ribbon and
pin Christmas cards to the ribbon, starting near the top.
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101. |
Paint fruit such as apples and pears with egg white and roll
in gold sparkles. Air dry on a rack and display in a basket along with nuts.
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