Saturday, December 17, 2011

Fa-la-la Fabulous Christmas Party!

Friday night lights at our Small Group Christmas Party!

The hostess of this beautiful home is a superb cook, interior and exterior designer, entertainer, and all around fa-la-la fabulous woman.  I want to say this is my home, but will have to fess up that it is not. Suffice to say I'm having serious house envy, but delighted to be invited in.
 Two tables=twice the fun.
 The first time I met this hostess, we were both hosting Christmas tea tables and we both used red and white transferware. Little did I know how extensive was her collection.

I didn't take a close up of this wreath, but it was filled with magnolia branches and hydrangeas. Love this little table tucked into a beautiful bay window. The plaid tablecloth is also made by the hostess.

Murano chandelier - fa-la-la-FABULOUS! Murano chandeliers belong to the old tradition of glass making on the famous island of the Venitian lagune.This tradition started 1000 years ago in Venice city (Rialto) and was transferred to Murano in the 12th century where the crystal was invented in the same period.








This mantle display was made with clippings from her yard, and magnolia blossoms that she picked up in Pasadena after the terrible winds a few weeks ago (now that's community service!), plus antlers and stuff and things she already had.  Love the country scene above the fireplace.
 Entry hall displays


Linking up with these fun parties; please stop by to see all the great things there!

Friday, December 16, 2011

Mercury Glass Candles

The gift of hospitality, and an artistically gifted designer=Yvonne. After talking about it for a year, we finally had CRAFT NIGHT with the ladies! My very gifted, artistic, and generous friend Yvonne, hosted five women for an evening of cooking, dining and candle making.

Take one simple glass, and metamorphosis into a faux mercury glass candle.

A few weeks earlier Yvonne designed a party for some fabulous event. When she arrived to set-up, she discovered that the previous event planner had left behind 50+ glasses, and she could take them.  So she came up with a way to turn them into something fa-la-la-fabulous, and showed us how she did it.

First she painted the glass with silver paint, then used a wet paper towel to "sponge" it off.  Repeated that step with gold.  Then she hot glue gunned buttons and beads.

 Behold, the fruits of our craftiness.
Next, she melted wax in a double boiler.

We rolled the wick around a pen, then rested it on the glass edge.
She poured the melted wax into the glass...
 We left it to harden, and ate pasta and salad! 
 Faux and authentic mercury glass.  Who knew it could be so simple?  Fa-la-la-fabulous!
 Imagine what else you could do to create faux mercury anything.  Get ideas from Pottery Barn's Mercury Shop.
I love this
Etched Antique Mercury Glass Canister 
and this
Paros Mercury Glass Lanterns
 and these Etched Mercury Glass Bath Accessories

We were invited back Friday night for a fa-la-la-fabulous dinner party, celebrating Christ's birth with our spouses and other members of our wonderful Bible Study group. What an amazing home, and decorated with such panache and style (next week post)!  Metamorphosis wonderland!

“Come, eat of my bread and drink of the wine I have mixed."
~Proverbs 9:1-5

Here's what I found out about Mercury Glass from the WiseGeeks.
Mercury glass was first created in Germany in the early 1800s. It was used as a more inexpensive material for candlesticks, vases, goblets, and other objects. Silvered glass quickly gained popularity in France, England, Bohemia, and the United States. The New England Glass Company showed a large display of the glass at the New York Crystal Palace Exhibition in 1853; included in the display were goblets, vases, spittoons, sugar basins, tumblers, and more. 

The New England Glass Company showed a large display of the glass at the New York Crystal Palace Exhibition in 1853; included in the display were goblets, vases, spittoons, sugar basins, tumblers, and more. Although some critics dismissed mercury glass as being too showy and looking too mirror-like, most people found it very attractive. 

One of the common uses for this measurement is determining the efficiency of evaporative coolers in dry regions. In general, a psychrometer or mercury glass bulb thermometer is used for measuring the wet bulb temperature of a location.





Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Dogwood Christmas

Christmas china can be beautiful, but I have come to prefer Christmas tables set with non-Christmas china.  I'm inspired by all the unique tablescapes posted on  blogs and at Christmas teas I've attended. So many designs inspired and augmented by stuff and things we already own from dishes to ornaments.  My Christmas Challenge is to create a Christmas table using each of my sets of dishes. Table #1 features Dogwood Dishes, Homer Laughlin "Eggshell Georgian" circa 1951.   I posted April Flowers using this pattern, and haven't used them since, so they were eager to come out and play.

Homer Laughlin Marking
Georgian refers to the type of . From 1941-1969, the next numbers refer to the plant.  So these were made in March, 1951 at Newell, West Virginia, across the Ohio River from their beginning in the 1870's at Liverpool, Ohio.


Used a table cloth I made for a table last Christmas,  Christmas Celebration.


My sister gave me four bird napkin rings found on sale at Z Gallerie.  Love them.
 Knives add a winter, rustic look to the table.  Can you see the little bee in the knife shaft?  New flatware from World Market purchased on sale.
Centerpiece made of dogwood leaves and reindeer that are part of my Christmas decorations.

 When I was putting together another table with another dogwood pattern (Do you think I like dogwoods?), I realized that I have magnolia trees on my campus, so I am able to prune a few branches as needed!  Dogwood flowers look like magnolia flowers so much that I originally called these trees Dogwoods until one of you Southern women corrected me (y'all know your magnolias!)
Love the large platters with hand painted on each "handle."
 Great bowl for mashed potatoes.


 Started with a rattan placemat that I found at a thrift store in Santa Barbara for $1.50 each.
 Layered with a charger I found at World Market last year on sale for $1.

Tablecloth made from a remnant I found at an upholstery store. 


Centerpiece made with Dogwood branches, cast iron reindeer, and votive lights for sparkle.



You may have heard of the legend of the dogwood, sometimes called the Easter Dogwood Legend.  It is appropriate for Christmas as well, a celebration of the birth of Jesus.
"For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."
`Isaiah 9:6
`

The Legend of the Dogwood
I happen to like the story as it origins are deep rooted in mountain culture, it is a story of a natural event.
The story goes that when Jesus was awaiting crucifixion and when the crosses were being made the trees begged God to spare them, but the Dogwood begged not for it's life but for the life of Jesus. 
The Roman soldiers picked the Dogwood.
The Dogwood pleaded with God to use another wood but God did not intervene.  The Dogwood would now carry the body of Christ to his death and the Dogwood knew that for all eternity Dogwoods would be known for this horror.
God in his wisdom spoke to the Dogwood and understood the tree; in that time Dogwoods were tall straight trees that provided sturdy timber for homes and vessels, safety for the animals. bowls for food, utensils to cook with; and God spoke.
God told the Dogwood that the burden that was carried would be carried only one time, and from that time on Dogwoods would be knarly small trees with poor timber size so not Dogwood could be used in this manner again, God told the Dogwood that the Dogwoods would now be responsible for eternity to help people remember.
The Dogwood would only bloom for a very short time before and after the date of the crucifixion, the flower would have just 4 petals representing the hands and feet of Christ, they would be marked with a hole and the blood of Christ and the center of the flower would be circular raised and represent the head of Christ wearing the crown of thorns.
And so it is today, the Dogwood is a small twisted tree, it blooms at Easter and the flower....well look for yourself.
Dogwood 

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Santa Sideboard 2011

Santa Sideboard Metamorphosis or my Miracle on 34th Street

A new addition to our home this year brings an opportunity to spread out the annual Santa Celebration.  I posted about metamorphosizing the new Sideboard here and the 2010 Santasation here (last year they were spread out around the house.)  So, it was with great delight that as I unpacked each Santa, like greeting an old friend, I was able to put them all together on our Arts & Crafts Sideboard.

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus."
- Francis Pharcellus Church, from the most reprinted newspaper editorial


"Oh, Christmas isn't just a day, it's a frame of mind... and that's what's been changing. That's why I'm glad I'm here, maybe I can do something about it."
~Kris Kringle, Miracle on 34th Street

 This is the first Santa, given to me as a gift in 1987.  I kept the original tag for years and now can't find it or remember the maker. Love his kind blue eyes.

"Look Doris, someday you're going to find that your way of facing this realistic world just doesn't work. And when you do, don't overlook those lovely intangibles. You'll discover those are the only things that are worthwhile."
~ Fred Gailey, Miracle on 34th Street

 This Santa found his way into my heart because of his regal, Nordic look.

 This Santa spoke to my "nesting" spirit, and loving all things bird related.
 This little Santa is hand crafted and rustic.
 This is my favorite Santa, who I call Thoreau or Walden Santa.  I imagine him stomping out to Walden Pond to leave gifts in all the cabins.
 This Santa found me at Stats in 2006 at the famous after Christmas sale. Love his flowing beard, a gorgeous green outfit.


"All my life I've wondered something, and now's my chance to find out. I'm going to find the answer to a question that's puzzled the world for centuries. Does Santa Claus sleep with his whiskers outside or in?"
~Fred Gailey, The Miracle on 34th Street

 This fragile Santa with glued on straw was found while antiquing and just spoke to me of hard work and perseverance.  My favorite Christmas book, A Miracle on 34th Street (did you know it was a book before a movie?) found in a used book store (remember book stores?).
 Copyright, 1947.   It just a special book to own that lead to the classic movie humorous story of an old man who thinks he is Santa Claus.
 It's all in the eyes, the eyes of a child.
 "I believe... I believe... It's silly, but I believe."
~Susan Walker, The Miracle on 34th Street


Joining
Metamorphosis Monday
The Tablescaper Seasonal Sundays
Savvy Southern Style Wow Us Wednesdays
No Minimalist Here
Common Ground Vintage Party