Saturday, December 19, 2020

The 2020 Christmas Tree

 





This year’s Christmas tree is quite different than last year’s tree as we are cocooning at home this year. Perhaps its simplicity is due to being lazy and not wanting to decorate a 10-foot tree when no one is coming to visit. Or the opportunity to do some holiday crafting of a different nature. Or maybe because I have collected some things on my strolls around the neighborhood.

Perhaps my inspiration came from a holiday project sponsored by Grove Family Library a few years back. 

We assembled a tree from cut greens tucked into a chicken wire cone. I brought nature-inspired items to decorate it. I made garland with hemlock cones. They are quite small. The feathers are pheasant from a hunter friend. There are also pine cones and green berries from some plant, sweet gum seed pods and a craft store bird's nest. I made a star from twigs and birch tree bark. I believe the red berry garland is from a pyracantha bush.


Decorations on our tree include a cornhusk doll made during a Master Gardener workshop with Charles White a few years back so it is a fond memory. A few feathers from a Cardinal were added. I have since made cornhusk dolls with my granddaughter. We even figured out how to make the boys and men. There was a request to make more but I ran out of cornhusks.



Acorns  are from wandering the neighborhood as are the feathers - bluejays, cardinals, doves, goldfinches and a few others. The milkweed pods are from the garden, dried hydrangea blooms and barberry twigs from a neighbor’s yard. The hemlock cones (so little) are from a tree our neighbor had to have removed because of wooly adelgid problems.



Little wreaths from the craft store were the bases for hemlock cones and acorns, plus a feather for accent. The holly sprigs were, again, from a neighbor's yard on a non-snowy day. 

The wooden "snowflake" came from a craft fair and was handmade using walnut, ash, cherry,  poplar and mahogany. Several were purchased as gifts. On a trip to Japan, students were asked to bring a few small gifts in case they needed to thank someone. A group got lost and a stranger led them back to their hostel. He received one of these in a small, tied box as a thank you. I am sure he was pleased to open the box and see one of these with a note about the wood.


And there is even a few Monarch wings that were found here and there. 

Wishing you a holiday season that brings you happy memories and thoughts of the great celebrations coming in the Aftertime.







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