Posts Tagged ‘holidays’

New Year’s Day — We All Love a Parade!

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

New Year’s is pretty much irrelevant to young children, who aren’t yet capable of understanding what all the hoopla is about. Fortunately, adults created parades and what child doesn’t love a parade? We thought it would be fun here to list some facts about the most famous of those, the Rose Parade, which everyone enjoys. We think some of the information will surprise you!

Roses12-28-09
When did the Rose Parade begin?

In 1890, 121 years ago, the Valley Hunt Club of Pasadena staged the first — the Tournament of Roses Parade. It was meant to showcase and celebrate the mild weather in California by people who had moved there from the East and Midwest.

By 1895, the parade had become a huge event, with reviewing stands and all kinds of activities — even a race one year between a camel and an elephant (the elephant won).

When did football become part of the celebration?
In 1902, the first post season college football game ever was held as part of the festivities. Stanford was crushed by the University of Michigan and gave up in the third quarter with the score at 49-0. Considering the game a major flop, the Tournament Association replaced it with — Roman-style chariot races! Football came back in 1916 and the new stadium, nicknamed “the Rose Bowl” was opened in 1923. The game has been a sell-out every year since 1947.

This year the No. 8 BCS-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes will battle the the No. 7 BCS-ranked Oregon Ducks.

Who decides what the floats will be?
Since 1918, the parade has had a theme that the floats must depict. The first was “Patriotism” and this year’s is “A Cut Above the Rest.” If you would like to know what the theme was in your birth year, the list is here.

How long does it take to make the floats that appear in the parade?

The process begins just a soon as the year’s festivities are over; the floats take a year to create. The application form for a 2005 float, click here, shows what’s involved in applying.

How many flowers are used on each float?
That depends on the float, but at least as many as the average florist would use in five years. The 2005 float in the answer above had over 11,500 individual flowers! THAT is a lot of flowers!

Why are horses in the parade?
Well, remember, the parade began before cars existed. Horses were a major part of the first parades and the tradition has continued. Each parade features over 300 horses and riders.

How many marching bands participate?
Only 16 bands are selected each year, out of approximately 50 entries.

What and who is the Grand Marshall?
The Grand Marshall is the official host. Those for the Rose Parade have been very prominent, including singers, astronauts, generals, former presidents, industry leaders, actors and actresses. This year’s GM is Captain Chesley Sullenberger III, who landed the damaged US Airlines plane in the Hudson on January 15th, 2009.

What time does the Parade take place?
It begins at 11:00 AM EST (8:00 AM PST) on New Year’s Day. It will be broadcast on ABC, the Hallmark Channel, HGTV, KTLA (Tribune), NBC, RFD-TV, Travel Channel and Univision. The Parade also is broadcast in more than 200 international territories and countries.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Crispy Christmas Cookies Create Crunchy Carpets

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

What could be more fun than making Christmas cookies? Well, eating them, for one, and Christmas tongue twisters, for another. Try these while you’re shaping and decorating your favorite cookies. Nothing is more fun than a case of the giggles!

MomBoyCookies12-15-09

See if you can say each of these three times — fast!

Crispy Christmas cookies create crunchy carpets.

Ten tiny tin trains toot ten times.

Santa’s seven sleighs slid sideways.

Eleven elves licked eleven licorice lollipops.

Pretty packages perfectly packed in paper.

Snow slows Santa’s sleigh.

Santa’s short suit shrunk.

Grandparents: A Gift Idea to Bridge the Miles!

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

With people spread out all over the country (and farther!) and with the hassle and cost of holiday travel, grandparents often find it difficult to be with grandchildren to celebrate the holidays. That can be rough on both grandparent and grandchild. This week, Grandparents.com published one real gem of an idea in its suggestions for bridging the distance: work on something together that can be shared when you next meet in person.

Let’s take one of our customized Storybook Quilts as an example. Many grandparents choose one to give as a wonderful surprise — but consider instead collaborating with your grandchild to create a handmade, original, customized Storybook Quilt. This is a wonderful way to enhance closeness and create memories that will be treasured for a lifetime (or two!). And NO special skills are required!

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Here’s how it works. For the sake of this story, we’ll assume that “Grandma” is the giver and “Olivia” is the recipient. But, of course, it could include Grandpa, be for a boy, or be two Storybook Quilts for twins!

Step 1. Grandma gives Olivia a Storybook Quilts gift certificate for Christmas (or for Hanukkah or Kwanzaa or a birthday). Olivia receives a special, handmade card with a special message from Grandma.

GiftCoupon
Step 2. The holidays pass. January arrives with its sudden quiet and, often, dark and dreary days. The blahs are waiting in ambush.

Step 3. Grandma and Olivia begin to customize their Storybook Quilt, corresponding with us back here in the workshop. (We’ll help with ideas, when you need us, and guide the process along.)

First, Grandma and Olivia think and talk and think and talk — and finally choose one of the eight (soon to be nine) Storybook Quilt themes: Maurice the Cat, Maggie the Dog, Dapper Dan the Snowman, DanZy the Rabbit, Vroom Vroom the Car, Amos the Bear, Luna the Turtle, Winnie the Frog or Per — oops! That’s our January surprise!

Then, they decide what words will be embroidered on the special square in the quilt.
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Together, they write a message to be printed in the storybook and a pick a photograph to include there, too.

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package


And, last but not least, Grandma and Olivia decide how they want to tailor the story, adding in their own names and details about their family’s life. This then is woven into the story by our expert writer.

Storybook Quilts e-mails photographs as the quilt is made
so that Grandma and Olivia both can watch it come to life.

Step 4. The completed Storybook Quilt is delivered in time for the next get-together. Grandma and Olivia open the package together, snuggle up under the quilt and Grandma reads Olivia their story.

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What a gift! What a memory! What a way to overcome the miles! What a great way to fight the Winter blahs! And, of course, your grandchild doesn’t have to live far away for you both to enjoy this creative project.

Storybook Quilts are available in eight themes and with various types of personalization and customization. To see them all, visit us at www.StorybookQuilts.biz Or give us a call to find out more. You can call us free using the Google Voice service on our order page.

We look forward to making your gift the most memorable ever.

Hanukkah and Christmas Gifts — Why Do We Give Them?

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Getting caught up in the hustle and bustle and buying of gifts at this time of the year is both fun and stressful. It’s not very often that we take the time to step back and think about the history of the traditions.

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Hanukkah gifts aplenty are not part of the traditional observance of this holiday, as many now believe, nor is the holiday of great significance in the Jewish religion. Hanukkah is observed to remember a miracle: after the Jews succeeded in driving out oppressors and taking back the temple, only enough oil was available to produce light for a single night. Yet, that oil burned eight nights, long enough to make additional oil. The lighting of one candle in the menorah each night for eight nights commemorates this miracle.

Although small gifts of money are an ancient Hanukkah tradition, the giving of many gifts is not. Instead, this practice has been borrowed recently from the Christian culture by Jews who live in countries where such gift-giving is common.

Tree_Presents12-7-09But wait! The giving of many gifts at Christmas isn’t really a Christian tradition, either! True the original “wise men” took gifts to Jesus, but the Bible isn’t clear when this occurred. The visit was anywhere between 40 days and two years after his birth, not on his birthday.

In fact, the timing of Christmas has very little to do with the actual date of Christ’s birth. Sometime in the third or fourth century, the Roman church chose December 25th as the official time to observe Jesus’s birth, but this was not meant to be historically accurate. Instead, the date coincides with the festival of the Roman god, Saturn, at the time of the Winter Solstice (when the hours of light begin to exceed the hours of darkness). The church adopted this festival and called it the mass of Christ – “Christmas.” By absorbing such festivals and traditions, the church hoped to retain those pagans who had converted to Christianity and attract others.

The gift-giving tradition actually began in earnest, in the US at least, in the early- to mid-1800s. Its origins, according to scholars, were partly commercial and partly a matter of public safety. By the 1820s, Christmas celebrations were becoming increasingly disruptive, particularly in industrializing urban areas. It became “traditional” for mobs of the poor to take to the streets to forcefully “beg” gifts and drinks from those more prosperous, yelling threats, pounding on doors and worse.

In response, a campaign was begun to move Christmas celebrations off the streets and inside, into the family circle. Clement Clark Moore, author of A Visit From St. Nicholas (better known now as The Night Before Christmas) was among those who were instrumental in producing this change by vigorously promoting the ideals in his poem.

So, does this mean we shouldn’t give gifts at Hanukkah or Christmas? No, of course not. But it does mean we should think about why we are giving them and about the original significance of the event we are commemorating.

The National Christmas Tree

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

There are Christmas trees and then here are CHRISTMAS TREES! Most of us have the former. The latter is reserved for the truly grand, outdoor trees — in Rockefeller Plaza, for example, and, especially, the National Christmas Tree.

Christmas_NationalTree
When did the tradition of having a national tree begin?
In 1923, President Calvin Coolidge presided over the first lighting of a National Christmas Tree. Woodrow Wilson had instituted the tradition of a tree at the Capitol in 1913.

Was there ever a time when the National Christmas Tree was not lit?
Yes, from 1942 to 1944 wartime blackouts meant the tree was not lit.

What day are the lights turned on?
This year, it’s December 3rd. Originally, the tree was lit on Christmas or Christmas eve. It was President Eisenhower, in 1954, who saw the value of lighting the tree earlier in the month to allow more tourists to be there.

Where does the National Christmas Tree come from?
Unlike some other huge Christmas trees, the National Christmas Tree is a living tree that stays right there in the same place all year long. The current tree, originally from Maryand, has been in place for 31 years, since 1978. It is 46 years old and nearly 42 feet tall.

Is the lighting ceremony shown on TV?
Yes, but the full ceremony will be broadcast the next day. To see it all live, go to www.thenationaltree.org on December 3rd at 5:00 PM (EST). Every performance, presenter and holiday festivity from the ceremony will be broadcast online.

To see a short history of the National ChristmasTree in pictures, visit http://www.thenationaltree.org/timeline/

I know what I hope to be doing Thursday at 5:00 PM! How about you?

On to Cyber Monday!

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

The turkey has been picked clean, the parade floats are deflated and so are the losing football teams. Black Friday 2009 is a memory. On to Cyber Monday! Now, this a shopping frenzy I can manage — up late/early at a computer is more my style than Black Friday’s forays.

Snowman_Backing
Who started Cyber Monday and when?
The National Retail Federation, a trade organization representing 1.6 million retailers, coined the term in 2005.

Is Cyber Monday the biggest online sales day of the year?

No. Consumers generally spend more online as the holiday draws nearer. The busiest time for online holiday shopping is December 5th through the 15th.

Are more retailers promoting Cyber Monday sales?
Yes. This year, 87% of retailers will have special Cyber Monday promotions, up from 84% last year and 72% in 2007.

Is Storybook Quilts having a Cyber Monday promotion?
Yes, we are, through our ArtFire shop. We just couldn’t resist being part of the fun! Dapper Dan the Snowman will delight your favorite child at a 20% discount; any Storybook Quilt package ordered that day also is eligible for a free year-occasion customized square. But shop early! Only two of each special are available at this discount.

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package

Dapper Dan Storybook Quilt Package


Are Cyber Monday promotions listed together anywhere?
Yes, there is a growing number of websites for that. CyberMonday.com is one of those.

We hope you enjoy CyberMonday! Remember, of course, to buy only from reputable websites. Scammers are looking for a little extra holiday cash, too! For useful tips about being cautious, see this article.

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Cornucopia2

THANKSGIVING IS . . . .

Thanksgiving is
a time of changing seasons, when leaves turn golden
in Autumn’s wake and apples are crisp
in the first chill breezes of fall.

Thanksgiving is
a time to reflect on the changes,
and to remember that we, too, grow and change
from one season of life to another.

Thanksgiving is
a time of gratitude to God,
whose guidance and care go before us . . .
and whose love is with us forever.

Let us remember the true meaning of Thanksgiving.
As we see the beauty of Autumn,
let us acknowledge the many blessings which are ours . . .
let us think of our families and friends . . .
and let us give thanks in our hearts.

~~Author Unknown.~~

All of us at Storybook Quilts wish you a wonderful Thanksgiving.

“Black Friday” — What’s in a Name?

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

I’m not one to get up a 4:00 AM to go shopping, although I am in awe of those who do. I also am not much for crowds or for impulse buying, although I do my share. But I am curious about many things, as you undoubtedly can tell from the posts on this blog.

So, I wondered, why is the day after Thanksgiving, when shoppers nationwide hit the stores, called “Black Friday”? Well, it depends on whom you ask.

Shopper11-17-09

In an earlier post, we noted that Thanksgiving football actually started in Philadelphia, basically our backyard. It seems that the term “Black Friday” did, too, in the mid-1960s. Philadelphia policemen dreaded this day, when downtown would be crammed with traffic and shoppers, and coined the term. It did not have a positive connotation, as you can tell!

Around about 1980 or so, merchants decided to try to put a positive twist on the “black” half of the term. “Black Friday,” they claimed, was a happy day when the holiday shopping season would start to pull their balance sheets into the black (and out of the red). This seems a wee bit farfetched — any merchant who operates in the red 11 months out of the year isn’t likely to be very profitable, but the myth has stuck.

Perhaps we can re-interpret this one more time. How about “black” because it’s dark when shoppers spring out of bed to rush to the sales? Or “black” because millions of computer screens remain turned off long after their normal wake-up times? Or “black” because millions of fathers, sons and daughters make their own breakfasts, while mom shops, and end up burning the toast? OK, that one was weak. So — your suggestions?

If you’re one of the early risers, I wish you a successful foray and a safe return home to a nice, long nap.

(No, sorry, Storybook Quilts isn’t having a sale on Black Friday. But on Cyber Monday (11/30), we are offering two specials through our Artfire Kiosk on our our Facebook Fan Page): a 20% discount on the first two Dapper Dan the Snowman Storybook quilts orderd and a free year-occasion square on the first two SQ packages ordered.

Fun Facts about Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Clearly, the big event in November is Thanksgiving. Remember the first stanza of this poem?

Over the river and through the wood,
To grandfather’s house we go:
The horse knows the way,
To carry the sleigh,
Through the white and drifted snow.

Somehow, this sounds like a lot more fun than a crowded airport and delayed flights!

GirlAtThanksgiving

Did Thanksgiving really start with the Pilgrims and Indians in what’s now Massachusetts?

Yes and no. The first harvest festival in the New World may have been held in the Plymouth colony. The Indians were indispensable to the survival of the Pilgrims the first few years in the New World. A three-day feast was held beginning December 13, 1621, to thank God; ninety of the Indians attended, including their leader.

Thanksgivings –- days of giving thanks to God and, often, fasting (not feasting) — were recorded as early as the 16th century by Spaniards in the Florida colony and again in 1607 in the Virginia colony.

Would turkey, sweet potatoes, pumpkin pie, corn and stuffing have been on the menu in 1621?

Turkey probably was. One Pilgrim wrote that “birds” were hunted for the event and wild turkeys were native to the area. Pumpkin or some sort of squash may well have been on the menu, although pumpkin pie probably was not – flour, if it had survived the voyage across the Atlantic at all, likely would have been used up or kept for bread – so, no crust, no pie. Sweet potatoes weren’t known in that part of the world at the time. Stuffing probably was not on the menu, at least not one made with bread. Corn almost certainly would have been part of the meal, perhaps ground and made into bread or pudding. Seafood of various types would have been included.

When did Thanksgiving become an official holiday in the US?

George Washington proclaimed a day of thanks to God in 1789, the year that the new Constitution was adopted. That year, a leading protestant church declared that the first Thursday in November would be its day of thanks.

It wasn’t until 1863, however, that a specific day was named as a national Day of Thanksgiving, the last Thursday of November. Lincoln’s Proclamation of the day, in the midst of the Civil War, is very powerful. It was written shortly after he toured the battlefield in Gettysburg, which saw the largest number of casualties in the war.

Even then, the proclamation might not have been issued had it not been for Mrs. Sarah Joseph Hale, who had pestered Presidents for years to proclaim an official holiday. (Sarah Hale was a very inspiring woman in many ways.)

Subsequent Presidents followed Lincoln’s lead in proclaiming a national day. In 1941, Congress designated the last Thursday in November as the official national holiday. Today, it’s celebrated by Americans of all beliefs and backgrounds.

GirlAtParade
Has Macy’s always had a Thanksgiving Day parade?

No, but it has been an amazingly long time – since 1924, 85 years! The balloons appeared in 1927. The parade was not held in the early 1940s, when the materials for the parade, particularly those for the balloons, were needed for the war effort.

How did the Macy’s parade get started?

In the 1920s, many of the Macy’s employees were recent immigrants from Europe, where parades that involve floats and people in costume are common (think Mardi Gras). They wanted to stage a similar festival to celebrate America. Participants dressed as clowns, cowboys, knights and sheiks and walked down the street accompanied by three floats (pulled by horses), four bands and zoo animals from the Central Park Zoo — camels, donkeys, elephants and goats. Santa Claus was last in the lineup, a tradition that continues to this day. Over 250,000 people attended.

Is Macy’s the only Thanksgiving Day parade?

No. Parades take place in many other cities that day, but none as elaborate or as famous as Macy’s in New York.

FootballRef

And football? When did that become a Thanksgiving tradition?

Even earlier than the parade! Some place the first game in 1902, in Pennyslvania, when the National Football League (not the same as today’s NFL) played for their championship. Ohio teams held contests on that day as early as 1905-06.

According to the Pro Football Hall of Fame: “When it comes to Thanksgiving Day football, NFL style, most fans first think of the Lions and the tradition that was started in 1934. It was their first year in Detroit after a local radio executive, George A. Richards, had purchased the Portsmouth (Ohio) Spartans and moved the team to Detroit.” The Thanksgiving Day game was intended to grab attention away from Tigers baseball, which dominated the sports news.

Who won? “The matchup between the Lions and the World Champion Chicago Bears proved to be an all-time classic. The 1934 Lions had not allowed a touchdown until their eighth game and entered the game with the Bears with a 10-1 record. But with 11 straight wins, Chicago had an even better record. Still a win would put the Lions into a first-place tie with the Bears with only a game left, a repeat clash with the Bears in Chicago, just three days later on December 2 . . . The Bears edged out the Lions 19-16 . . .”

What are your Thanksgiving traditions? We’d love to hear!

Handmade in the USA

Friday, November 13th, 2009

“Handmade in the USA” has a nice sound to it, particularly as we plan for gift giving. It makes me think of a woodworker creating a beautiful table that will be an everyday joy, or a ceramics artist making a mug that feels really good in my hand with warm coffee or tea or, of course, one of our Storybook Quilts, enriching the quiet times that we spend with our children.
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As someone in the handmade industry, I can testify to the care that goes into creating handmade items. Each of us is doing something we choose to do and like to do. That produces dedication to quality – and puts a bit of real love into every item we produce.

Buying handcrafted items not only directly supports American workers, but also enriches lives and often provides the stuff of heirlooms – passed on and loved for generations.

So, how do you find “handmade in the USA”? We’d love to hear your comments and know your sources. We’ll post them here.

A few of our thoughts follow.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Online, www.stillmadeinusa.com/handcraft.htm is one good source. The owner of the site was one of the judges in our Name the Turtle Contest, held last summer. Her site is not an online store, but includes links to carefully screened sources for a range of goods, both handmade and not.

Online marketplaces include Artfire, where artisans from the USA and elsewhere offer their goods for sale (including us). Other such sites include Etsy, for example, and similar marketplaces appear fairly regularly. The advantages of these marketplaces for the customer is the ease of searching many shops at once and the fact that most require shop owners to abide by rules meant to protect the customer. (Note that not all goods on such sites are handmade and not all are made in the USA.)

Off the web, the possibilities are endless. Local crafts fairs, particularly those that are juried, are a great source of high-quality handmade goods. I almost always find some delightful new item or technique created by an imaginative artist; I also often find inspiration for my own work. Online listings of crafts fairs, and whether they are juried, include this one, for example: http://festivalnet.com/index.html

Church fairs offer another great hunting ground for locally handmade goods, from hand-knitted baby booties to gorgeous quilts, small woodcrafts and more. I always enter the quilt raffles and dream about winning, although I never have.

Most crafts and church fairs are the same weekend each year, so if you find one you like, mark it on next year’s calendar!

Around the country, craftspeople and artisans often concentrate in particular geographic areas – by design or by chance — sharing ideas and offering a number of shops easily visited in a day or so. Some of these are supported by far-sighted organizations, such as this one http://www.handmadeinamerica.org, which understand the important role of handmade in the economy and the culture of this (or any) country.

Remember us, please, as you shop for handmade. Storybook Quilts are entirely original and made entirely by hand in the USA with American-made materials and love.

A Storybook Quilt

A Storybook Quilt