Wednesday, December 9, 2009

85 Degrees of Holiday Spirit

If you live in a more northern climate than me (and who doesn't?), you know that rush of holiday spirit that comes with the first dusting of snow. It may only last until the first time you need to dig your car out, or you slip and fall on the ice, but the crisp air and the snowflakes definitely help to usher in the winter holidays. I went to school up north and I lived in Germany for 3 years, and I remember that rush of seeing the first flurries, knowing the holidays were just around the corner.

Not so much here in the South. To make up for the lack of season change, we have all kinds of other ways to help us get in the holiday mood. Some people string every surface of the outside of their houses in lights, mostly icicle shaped. Not me -- I'm afraid of heights, have a bad habit of falling off ladders, and I am married to the least handy guy in Florida, if not the continental U.S. Some people cover their lawns in giant blow-up Santas and snowmen that stay up with hot air being blown in from fans below. Not me -- the movement created by the blowing air kind of freaks me out. Some people turn their thermostats down to 65 to jack up the air conditioning and light a fire in their fireplace -- OK, I admit to that particular act of desperation, but only on the actual holiday. For a lot of us though, we just decorate the bejeezus out of the inside of our houses with holiday stuff. This has the extra benefit of being able to be accomplished in air-conditioned comfort. Ahhhh.

I do admit to having somehat of a fondness for Christmas. Some would call it obsession, but I suspect they're decendents of Ebeneezer Scrooge. Sure we had to have storage lofts built into the garage ceiling to hold the holiday stuff that won't fit on the floor to ceiling shelving on 2 walls of my 3 car garage, but that space was just being wasted anyway! And I collect nothing else, well, not counting my yarn stash, needles, ummmm. OK, that doesn't count since it isn't on display and doesn't need to be dusted.

So back to Christmas. I put up 11 Christmas trees every year. 10 big ones and 1 little one. And every year I think, OK, I'm finally finished and don't need another ornament or whatever. And then I spot something too adorable NOT to have it on a tree, or a store I just happen to be in puts their holiday trim stuff 60% off before Thanksgiving, and well..... All this holiday spirit takes a fair amount of time to install in the house. So I'm afraid my book (and the attendant knitting) has really gotten the short end of the stick this month. So I thought I'd share a little tour of my house so you can see why I didn't knit much for the last few weeks. Ready? Welcome to what we call the "Tour des Trees." Before you even think about judging me, this accumulation of holiday joy took over 25 years.


So welcome to Maison de la PurlQueen! From the outside, you'd never know the Chritmas-Shoppe-on-Steroids that awaits. Simple wreaths with bows on all the windows, swagged garland on the railings. No lights or figurines. I save all the craziness for the inside...






First up, my living room. The tree is all copper, brown, and dark gold with 3 or 5 ornaments to a branch and lots of texture from brown velvet poinsettias, golden dried garlands, painted twig wreaths, beaded fruit, die cut wooden curlicues and the like. This tree is my husband's favorite. My favorite changes every year, but I think it's like having 11 kids -- you love them all in their own way. But fewer stretch marks with Christmas trees.



My dining room tree is decorated in cream and gold. In case you can't tell, my theory is that if you can see any green, you need more ornaments! The giant wooden angel is new this year. I spotted it at the wonderful neighborhood garden shop where I buy my poinsettias and it needed a good home. The reindeer prancing around my chandelier are one of my favorite things, although I really love the hand-painted and formed metal nativity on the table. I love the unusual elongated shapes.



This is my kitchen. The tree is done in the colors of grapes -- soft bright grren and wine purple. There are bunches of beaded grapes on the tree, as well as lots of very sparkly ornaments. One of my favorite things this year is the fixture over the kitchen table. It's wrapped in layers of simple artificial garland, which forms the base for a couple hundred floral picks of sparkly grape leaves, red and green grape clusers and metallic feathers. Then I hung a dozen or so dangly ornaments from under the arms of the bottom layer. There's a smaller matching hanging fixture over the stove, but without the dangly ornaments. Fire hazard. Ask me how I know that....


The porch of my lovely Italian garden, visible through the French doors in my kitchen. The porch is dressed up with swags from the coach lights and lots of fresh poinsettias. Even the pots on the fountain were replanted in red and white.



My family room tree is all red and gold glitter to match my sofa. Well, the sofa isn't glittered -- just red and gold. It's topped with a full-on glitter leaf garland that really looks magical when lit at night. And on my piano, this is my Christmas gift from my husband that he bought for me on our vacation in Alaska this past September. We were going to hang it from the ceiling, but it weighs a ton and did I mention that my husband is the least handy guy in Florida?



My favorite spot in my entire house -- my French courtyard garden that is through the wall of French doors in my family room. All dressed up for the holidays. If it would just cool off already, I could leave the doors open and this becomes an outdoor room.





Master bedroom tree has a wild jungle theme (roarrrr! we knitters are a wild bunch) with tropical flowers, pineapples, parrots and monkeys. Glittered palm fronds in red, gold and green make this tree dazzling when light at night.




Our dog and cat tree in my husband's home office. All red, white and silver with dog and cat ornaments. La Maison de la PurlQueen is home to the most spoiled pets in America..




Let's head upstairs. This is part of my santa and snow globe collection at the top of the stairs and my girly tree in my home office. All pink, cream, golg and soft sage green, with Victorian dolls and jeweled ornaments.




I think this is my favorite tree this year. In my son's room (though he lives in NYC and uses this room about 5 days a year, more if the Magic are in the NBA playoffs), the tree has a lodge theme to go with the room and has 3 layers of garlands -- acorns, corrugated tin rings, and frosted red berries on twigs -- and lots of cabin-in-the-woods type ornaments.




This tree is in my studio. All red and green and covered with cardinals and bird houses, Hmmm, I see some green in this picture. I obviously need more ornaments....



Last but not least -- our "travel tree" in our home gym. With a snow theme and ornaments from our travels, each ornament is a memory of a family vacation. In this shot, you can see the nutcracker from our Christmas market trip to Germany's castle road, an Eskimo papoose from our Alaskan cruise, and a double decker bus from our trip to London a couple of years ago. So many menories make this tree very special to us.


So there's also garland on every mirror, Santas everywhere, a German Christmas Wonderland Villge, and well, more Christmas than you can shake a peppermint stick at, but you get the idea. So if you're feeling a little Grinchy this holiday season, come on over and I'll fire up the air conditioning, make some hot cocoa (peppermint schnapps optional) and we'll get you all sorted out. If I don't see you before Christmas, I wish you the happiest of holidays and a new year full of gorgeous yarn and very happy knitting!

2 comments:

Deborah said...

You, my friend, are a riot! I was born and raised in Massachusetts so I grew up with all the traditional Christmas stuff. I did, however, live in Florida and I remember some of what you have shown and found myself giggling. I met a woman down there who decorated her tree to match the rooms too and I had never seen that before. (outside of those fancy decorator magazines)I have one tree with ornaments that are more than 30 years old, baby's first x-mas, school projects, various gifts in the last 30 years and to me that speaks Christmas. It is a walk down memory lane every year as we take out and unpack our various boxes and by the end of it, we have a tree and heart full of beautiful, loving memories. I have a little tree that goes up on ocassion with mini ornaments that go on that. Lastly, does this mean you don't go to the Boat Parade? I went to that a few times and loved it!

PurlQueen said...

When I was growing up in Cocoa Beach, we lived on a canal of the Banana River. The boat parade went right past our dock. The 5 of us kids would be out there in shorts and tank tops waving at Santa. Thanks for reminding me of that -- I'm grinning ear to ear.

My Mom has all the ornaments we made as kids and puts them on her tree every year. It's a darn ugly tree, but lots of memories. Of course she had 4 craft-y daughters. I, on the other hand, had 1 very un-craft-y son. No handmade ornaments available, I'm afraid. I needlepointed dated ornaments for him when he was younger, but gave all of them to him this year for his own tree at his own home in NYC.

One of my favorite thing about "collecting" Christmas is that when you open the boxes to start putting everything out, it's pulling out things you love that you haven't seen for 10 months or so. You get to re-live that wonder every year. And working from home, I get to really enjoy my personal holiday wonderland 24 hours a day.

Merry Christmas and I hope the new Year brings you and your loved ones peace and prosperity.

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