Thursday, January 31, 2008
Garden Style Decorating
Now that winter is here in earnest I’m sure you’ve already brought in your potted plants. Perhaps you retrieved your palm trees, ferns, ivy’s and the like from Old Man Winters grip. Now is the perfect time to create a charming indoor garden room. Gather some of your favorite outdoor sculptures, birdbaths, and wrought iron trellises to bring in as well. You love them in your outdoor “rooms”, so you’ll love them just as much in your new indoor garden rooms. Mix your plants in with these garden elements in new ways. Use the birdbath to hold magazines, a wire birdcage to hold a large candle or a potted orchid. Your stone garden bench can be brought in and used as a coffee table. Add floral patterned tablecloths on your tables and botanical prints on the walls. Vases filled with fresh flowers go a long way in chasing away the winter blues too.
The Color of Flowers!
It’s only natural to get the urge to bring color into your home during the winter months. Just like we all need sunshine to be healthy and happy, we all need color! Color has the power to change our mood, affect our emotions and even our health. Natures’ gift of flowers is one perfectly beautiful way to give yourself a much needed dose of color.
Blue: The pale blue of hydrangeas or the deep blue of an iris can calm worries and anxiousness and also cools. Blue represents peace and openness.
Pink: Whether you think of delicate pink rosebuds for pink peonies in full bloom the color coveys youth, innocence and joy.
Purple: Purple flowers like delphinium, violets and alliums represent royalty, dignity, pride and success.
Red: The color red creates energy. Red roses represent desire, passion, strength and passionate love.
Yellow: Yellow symbolizes happiness and friendship. Think of sunny daffodils and you’ll know why you’re smiling.
Green: Nature itself bursts with green in every shade. It compliments all the other colors and represents health, freshness, optimism and good fortune.
Blue: The pale blue of hydrangeas or the deep blue of an iris can calm worries and anxiousness and also cools. Blue represents peace and openness.
Pink: Whether you think of delicate pink rosebuds for pink peonies in full bloom the color coveys youth, innocence and joy.
Purple: Purple flowers like delphinium, violets and alliums represent royalty, dignity, pride and success.
Red: The color red creates energy. Red roses represent desire, passion, strength and passionate love.
Yellow: Yellow symbolizes happiness and friendship. Think of sunny daffodils and you’ll know why you’re smiling.
Green: Nature itself bursts with green in every shade. It compliments all the other colors and represents health, freshness, optimism and good fortune.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Home and The Holidays
I don’t know about you but I think for most people when they think of the holidays they think about home and family. Then maybe the food; dishes and treats that are only made once a year. Traditions are a big part of the holidays too. How does a tradition get started?, I wondered. Once, my daughter was reminiscing about the holidays and mentioned some things that I hadn’t realized I did every year. They were symbols of the holidays for her. I knew then that those things had become our traditions. One of our traditions began when we started putting a live Christmas tree out on our deck at Christmastime. We add white lights and this year I'll put ornaments on it. There's nothing prettier than after it snows. The tree has a sort of muted glow from all the tiny white lights. We always hang bird feeders on it so we can watch the birds up close throughout the winter. After several years of feeding the same birds they have just become part of our menagerie of pets. We look for the cardinals, the finches and the little brown wrens. The juncos and nuthatches as well as the little chickadees and doves all make up our flock. Enjoying our outdoor Christmas tree has become one of my most favorite holiday traditions.
Friday, November 16, 2007
Recipes = Memories
I was going through my recipe box the other day and it was like going back in time. I have one recipe for Crumb Cake that I got in a home economics class back in High School. That was a long time ago. It was delicious and I haven't made it in years! It makes me think of baking with my best girl friend in her mom's kitchen with all those yellow appliances....yes it was the 70's!! There's another one for Beef Stew that I made when my kids were babies and starting to eat "real" food. I would actually put it in the blender so they could eat it. I have several Christmas cookie recipes that was from a visit to my girlfriends house in Hawaii. We were visiting with my 3 month old daughter and had a major cookie baking session. I still use those recipes and am reminded of it every time. Recipes that were given to me by someone and written in their own handwriting are especially meaningful. It conjures up that person in my mind and how much I care for them or special times we spent together baking or whatever. I think it's a wonderful gift and with that thought I plan to do that for my own kids using recipes that I know they remember and enjoyed. Handwritten family recipes will be one of my gifts to them this Christmas.
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Hello Gorgeous!!
What a show the trees put on this time of year! The colors are incredible aren’t they? One of my favorite things to do with the leaves that fall is to press them in between the pages of the phone book to use in various fall decorations. If you have a table with a piece of glass on the top of it, place several colorful leaves in an artistic arrangement underneath the glass for a beautiful surprise. Use them as placecards by writing your guests name with a gold or silver paint pen, right on the leaf and place it on top of your guests plate. If you have a particularly beautiful leaf, use a solid color mat board in a picture frame behind it or even a gorgeous piece of fabric to compliment the colors in your leaf. Include an especially beautiful leaf inside the envelope with any correspondence that you send at this time of year. Of course you can tuck them into your fall wreaths or displays all around the house!
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