Category Archives: Holiday

Easter Egg Decorating

Decorating Easter eggs is always a fun and creative project whether it’s with your children, or all by yourself.  This year we decided to try some non-traditional decorating options.

 

metallic eggs 300x225 Easter Egg Decorating

 

The scrapbooking aisle can be a great place to get supplies.  Gold, adhesive backed, letters are perfect for creating monogrammed eggs.  And metallic permanent markers can create a very sophisticated look.  Move over pastel pink!

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Watercolor paints are perfect for adding multiple colors to your eggs.  The traditional dying is great for a solid color, but gets super tricky if you want more than one color.  The water color paints are easy to use, easy to clean up, and can be as vibrant or as light as you like.  Another fun trick is to draw a design with a black permanent marker on the egg first, and then watercolor over the design.

Permanent markers allow you to create very detailed designs and they dry much quicker than paint or dye.

 

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Also, be sure and check out my blog post from last year for some tips on how to make glitter eggs.

I will be sharing these ideas on Tulsa’s Fox 23 Great Day Green Country this morning.  Tune in for some more tips!

Delicious Raspberry Crumble Bars: Make Them Today

 

Vdaybars Delicious Raspberry Crumble Bars: Make Them Today

Happy Valentine’s Day! Or Happy Anti-Valentine’s Day if you prefer.

If you’re a planner, then Valentine’s Day dessert is likely in the bag. You’ve ordered your chocolates, baked your cookies or at least purchased your ingredients for the big day.

But if the week slipped by, and you’re scrambling for a quick treat — we’ve got just the thing: Raspberry bars made with jam and shortbread. Perfect.

I have to admit, I actually made these lovelies for the Super Bowl. But the pretty raspberry jam squished in the middle of the buttery shortbread made me think they would be perfect for Valentine’s Day. And they are!

Vdaybars2 Delicious Raspberry Crumble Bars: Make Them Today

The secret? Good jam and a great recipe. Mine is circa Ina Garten, her Raspberry Crumble Bars to be exact.  I know, I know! I share way too many Barefoot Contessa recipes.

But I just couldn’t resist — the woman really knows her way around a shortbread!

The recipe is really easy to follow and the ingredients list is short. Butter, flour, sugar,  vanilla , salt raspberry jam and almonds.

If you can read, you can make this decadent dessert. The sweet to salty ratio works really well here because the raspberry jam is tart, and the shortbread is buttery and not overly sweet.

Vdaybars3 Delicious Raspberry Crumble Bars: Make Them Today

Enjoy the holiday however you choose to celebrate (or not celebrate).

Raspberry Crumble Bars

1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
2-1/3 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
10 to 12 ounces good raspberry jam, such as Hero
2/3 cup good granola without dried fruit
1/4 cup sliced almonds
Confectioners’ sugar, for sprinkling

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
2. Place the butter and sugar in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix on medium speed just until combined. With the mixer on low, add the vanilla.
3. Sift the flour and salt together and, with the mixer on low, slowly add to the butter mixture, mixing until it almost comes together in a ball. Turn the dough out on a board. Lightly pat two-thirds of the dough evenly on the bottom of a 9-inch square baking pan and about 1/4-inch up the sides. Spread with the jam, leaving a 1/4-inch border. Mix the granola into the remaining dough with your hands. Break the dough into small bits and distribute it on top of the jam, covering most of the surface. Sprinkle the almonds on top. Bake the bars for 45 minutes, until lightly browned.
4. Cool completely and cut into 9 or 12 bars. Sprinkle lightly with confectioners’ sugar.

Valentine’s Day Mailbox Ideas

Valentine’s Day is only two days away!  And with this day of love comes many preparations for school-age children – from filling out valentines for each classmate, whipping up a snack to share, and crafting a ‘mailbox’ to receive all the love notes and candy that will come their way.  Do your kids have their Valentine’s boxes ready to go?  If you are running behind for the holiday, here are a few ideas on how to take a tissue or cereal box and turn it into a whimsical creation.  Hope these help foster some creative, last minute mailbox solutions!

DET Valentine01 Valentines Day Mailbox Ideas

image via Mommy Lessons 101

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image via A Small Snippet

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image via Welcome Friends

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image via Nathan’s Prayer

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image via The Blackberry Vine

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image via Creative Treasures

Valentine’s Day Decor- Wreaths of Love

 

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image via Pretty Handy Girl

We are already 5 days into February – can you believe it?!  Valentine’s decorations have filled some of the holes left by the long-ago put away Christmas trimmings.  There is one thing lacking in my household, though, and that is a cheerful wreath for the front door.  A quick DIY project to create my own is on my To Do List for this week.  In need of some amorous inspiration, I did a round-up of some wreathes I thought might be possibilities for my home.  So many cute ones out there!  I thought I’d share my faves with you:

DET ValDay02 Valentines Day Decor  Wreaths of Love

image via life {illustrated}

DET ValDay03 Valentines Day Decor  Wreaths of Love

image via Positively Splendid

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image via ItzFitz Etsy Shop

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image via Simply Living

This one could be a quick, easy one with poms like the ones we showed you how to make in our very first Prairie Hive Magazine, Issue 1!

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image via Design Improvised

 

New Year’s Eve Bubbly: Easy Champagne Cocktails

champs2 New Years Eve Bubbly: Easy Champagne CocktailsImage via Revel: Revel

Happy New Year’s Eve! For festive party-goers or for curl-up-and-stay-home-bodies, the night is a perfect excuse to bust out some of that bubbly you’ve been saving.

Champagne, or sparkling wine, is one of my favorite beverages. I’ve always been a fan of the bubbly, and I drink it on every special occasion.

That said, not everyone in your party is always a huge fan. So sometimes, they are more apt to try a glass of the festive stuff if it’s in the form of a cocktail.  Fair enough!

champs22 New Years Eve Bubbly: Easy Champagne CocktailsImage via WildFleur

Sometimes, all you need is a few drops of Chambord or another flavored liqueur to brighten up those glasses of bubbly. Or, you can liven up a party with a Champagne punch. No matter what you choose, it’s a fun way to celebrate the New Year!

Here are a few of my favorite Champagne varieties and recipes. Have a safe and happy New Year’s Eve!

 New Years Eve Bubbly: Easy Champagne Cocktails

1. Individual cans of Sofia, by Francis Coppola Winery 2. Pomegranate Champagne Punch, Martha Stewart 3. Frozen fruit skewers for a slushy Champagne garnish 4. Blackberry Champagne Cocktails, Williams-Sonoma 5. Cosmopolitan Champagne Cocktails, Epicurious 

New Year’s Eve Party DIY – Put Glitter On It!

NYE1 New Years Eve Party DIY   Put Glitter On It!

Image via Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2011

So, Christmas is over – it’s time to start thinking about New Year’s Eve!  If hosting a party is in your plans, the go-to decor is metallics, black and white. For some easy New Year’s Eve Party DIY options, our philosophy is – Put Some Glitter On It! In last years Winter issue of Prairie Hive Magazine, we showed off our glitter style with DIY glitter orbs and metallic and glitter coated wood blocks for displaying food and drinks (see Lisa’s post HERE for a full how-to).  For more ambitious crafters, the wood veneer and glittered orbs are absolutely stunning…find Roxanne’s step-by step HERE in Issue 4.  For even more glitter goodness, check out today’s Great Day Green Country for a quick DIY votive project!

NYE2 New Years Eve Party DIY   Put Glitter On It!

Image via Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2011

NYE3 New Years Eve Party DIY   Put Glitter On It!

Image via Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2011

NYE4 New Years Eve Party DIY   Put Glitter On It!

Image via Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2011

NYE6 New Years Eve Party DIY   Put Glitter On It!

Image via Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2011

Cheers to a festive New Year’s!  For the delicious food and drink recipes shown in our party, check out this post.

Happy (Holiday) Weekend!

PH8 CPCH 13sm Happy (Holiday) Weekend!

 

Image via Prairie Hive, Winter 2012 Issue 

 

Well, we made it through the end of the world, now it’s time to celebrate!! Have a wonderful weekend full of last minute shopping, wrapping, baking, crafting or whatever warms your heart!

Winter Garland DIY

PH Garland NEW 2 Winter Garland DIY

Image from Prairie Hive Magazine, Winter 2012 Issue

Hopefully by now, you’ve checked out our new issue of Prairie Hive Magazine!  To get in the holiday spirit, we collaborated with the elves over at Gleeful Peacock Mercantile to create some lovely winter garlands (who says they are just for Christmas?).

We asked each of the artists to give us the DIY details:

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Painted Pinecone Garland, by Nikki at Gleeful Peacock

Items Needed: Pine Cones, Jute, Spray Paint, Hot Glue

Step 1 – Spray paint pinecones your desired colors.  This will take a few coats and you will want to spray at an angle that gets the paint into the core of the pine code.  Allow a day to dry.

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Step 2 – Cut jute in 2” to 3” lengths. Hot glue the strips in a loop on top of the pinecones.

 pine cone loop  1024x682 Winter Garland DIY

Step 3 – Wrap jute in a spiral around the loop and down the pinecone. Creating a cap that covers the glue from the loop. Cut the end and glue to secure.

 wrapped pine cone  1024x682 Winter Garland DIY

Step 4 – Cute your just the desired length of garland plus a few feet extra. Start on one end, a foot in to allow a end to tie to an mantle or banister.  Tie the just around the loop of the first pinecone. Tie a pinecone every 6 to 8 inches and rotate colors as you please.

 garland  1024x682 Winter Garland DIY

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“Be Merry” Book Rosette Garland, by Tiffany Foster

Items needed :a book, letter stickers or cricut, hot glue gun, permanent adhesive,bakers twine, Exacto knife, glitter, tacky glue, paint brush, small clothespins

  1. Decide what you want your garland to say.  This will determine how many medallions you will need to make.
  2. Cut a good amount of book pages out close to the spine of the book.  You can use an exacto knife or a single blade of a sharp pair of scissors.

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3. Cut 2 ½ x 8 inch strips (I use a clear ruler and a rotary cutter to make this process go faster).  Make sure to center the print on the strips so they are interesting.

 4. Using permanent adhesive (I used The Craft Collection Permanent Adhesive Tape Runner), join three strips together for each medallion you wish to make, overlapping about ¼ of an inch.

5. Once you have all your strips joined together begin accordion folding them end to end with about ¼ inch folds.

6. When all the strips are folded, join the two ends together with your permanent adhesive, making sure the folds match up.

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 7. Place the circle on the table and press to center….now the magic happens. Ta! Da! A medallion!

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8. This part is a little tricky.  While holding the the center put a little glob of hot glue in the middle   – don’t worry about what it looks like because we will be covering it with our letters later (I usually spread the glue into the grooves a little as it cools.  If you don’t like to live dangerously you might want to just glue a little circle onto the back or something safer).

9. Repeat those steps until you have all of your medallions folded and ready.

10. Now cut the letters for your garland.  I cut mine on my Circut using the Simply Sweet card size 1 ½” lower case on Red card stock.  You could also use stickers or freehand them onto your circles.

11. Punch or trace enough circles for each medallion.  I punched mine with a 1 & 7/8” circle punch.  You could also just trace something you had around the house that was the right size.

12. Sprinkle some gold glitter onto a paper plate and pour a little glue into a dish. I used Martha Stewart Florentine Gold glitter and Elmer’s Craft Bond Tacky Glue but I added a little water to it because it was very tacky and difficult to spread.

13. Paint the glue onto the edge of the circles and then dip into the glitter.  Repeat with each circle.  Do the same with the medallions.

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20121124 171210 1024x768 Winter Garland DIY 13. Atttach letters to circles.  I used Martha Stewart ballpint-tip glue pen for this job because it is much easier to glue a tiny space with this tool.

14. Next attach your circles with a glue gun.  Use plenty of glue because the circle will help hold your medalion together.  Make sure the circle is in the center of the medallion.

15. Lay out your medallions in the order they will hang to determine how much bakers twine you will need.

16. Hang your twine.

17. Attach medalions to twine with mini- clothespins.

18. Be Merry!

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The No Sew JOY Bunting by My Paper Pinwheel

Items Needed: Canvas Fabric, acrylic paint, form paint brush, foam alphabet stamps, natural twine, pom pom ribbon, fabric scraps, hot glue gun

1. Cut out three bunting shapes (I chose to use a pendant shape but you can easily do a traditional triangle shape).

2. Take foam alphabet stamps and acrylic paint and brush the paint just covering the letters.

3. Stamp each pendant with the letters.

4. Measure the twine for where the garland will hang.

5. Fold the top part of the pendants over the twine and hot glue it in place.

6. Take the pom pom ribbon and hot glue it across the word “Joy”.

7. Finished the garland with scrap fabric cut into a long strip and tied on each end.

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Fabric Scrap Garland by Tiffany Foster

Items Needed: scraps of fabric, string of lights (50 light string is ideal for a mantle)

1. Cut fabric info 9″x2″ strips.

2. Tie onto the string of lights.

(Now that last one is my kind of DIY!) Watch for us on Great Day Green Country next week to show off these garlands and more!  After the show, for you non-crafty types, these garlands will be available for purchase at Gleeful Peacock Mercantile.

That’s a Wrap!

How is your Christmas shopping coming?  I’m excited to be (slightly) ahead of the game with just a couple of items left to hunt down.  Thank goodness one task is almost crossed off the never-ending “To Do” List.  But now that there is a stack of gifts piled on my guest room bed, it’s time for the final step – wrapping!

I really love beautifully wrapped presents sitting under a twinkling Christmas tree.  There is just something about the sight that makes my living room feel so warm and cozy.  Another thing I love is a quick and easy DIY way of wrapping these gifts.  The holiday season never fails to be filled with parties, gatherings, bakings and buyings on top of the daily duties.  Though I desire the gifts I give to have a personalized and pretty, I simply do not have the time to devote to intricate details.  So I’m drawn to the simple elegance of gift-wrapping these days.  For me, it is the perfect way to ‘wrap’ up my Christmas tasks!

Below are a few lovely ideas of how to dress up your packages without a lot of supplies and/or you can do on a limited time frame.

And to keep you entertained while swimming in paper, tape and tags, take a listen to this adorable song about the frustrating plastic packaging of toys these days by Sara Groves: “Toy Packaging

DET Wrap01 Thats a Wrap!

image via Martha Stewart

 DET Wrap02 Thats a Wrap!

image via The Haystack Needle

DET Wrap03 Thats a Wrap!

image via Blissfully Content

DET Wrap04 Thats a Wrap!

image via Fancy House Road

DET Wrap05 Thats a Wrap!

image via The Thrifty Crafter

Tips for a great Dirty Santa Gift Exchange

One of my favorite activities during the holidays is gathering with friends and having a Dirty Santa (or White Elephant) gift exchange!  And lucky for me, my first (of 3) of these types of parties of the season is this weekend. I love to see what gifts everyone comes up with for a lot of laughing is usually guaranteed.  The group of friends at the party this coming weekend never ceases to amaze me with their creativity and cleverness of presents they bring!

If you have never played this type of gift exchange game or just need a little refresher course, I thought I’d share some of the rules, some tips I have found to not only be helpful, but quite necessary at times, and some fun gift ideas.

 

HOW TO PLAY:

1. Have everyone who wants to participate in the gift exchange bring a wrapped gift within the price range that is prior set by the hosts.

2. Display gifts so that everyone can inspect the available gifts to choose from.

3. Have participating guests draw a number from a bowl up to the number of people playing.

4. The person who drew #1 selects a wrapped gift and opens it.  Be sure all players get to see what it is.

5. Person #2 gets to choose whether to steal #1′s opened gift or select a new wrapped gift to open.

6. If #2 steals the gift, then #1 has to open a new gift.

7. Next #3 plays.  He gets to choose whether to steal an opened gift or select a new wrapped gift to open.

8. If he steals a gift, that person gets to choose whether to steal a different opened gift or select a new wrapped gift to open.

9. The player that gets a gift stolen from them gets to choose whether to steal another opened gift or select a new wrapped gift to open.  (They may not steal back the gift that was immediately stolen from them, but may do so in a future round or if someone else has possession in between).

10. Play continues on in this manner, but once a gift is stolen a set amount of times it is then considered “frozen” and the last stealer wins that gift… until everyone has a gift.

 

HELPFUL TIPS:

1.  Specify the type of gift exchange it will be.  I’ve been to “new/good items” gift exchanges, something you find around your house trades, and even after-Christmas parties where you bring the least desirable gift you received for the holiday.

2.  If going with new items, set a spending range.  A minimum and maximum dollar amount are helpful.  No one wants to end up with a QuikTrip pickle when they spent good money on a nice bottle of wine.

3.  Set rules PRIOR to starting the game.  Trust me.  It can get pretty tense and ugly if you don’t specify if the gift is ‘frozen’ on the third possession or the third steal.  Sounds like the same thing… it soooooo is not.

4.  A twist on the basic rules is that if at the end of the game the #1 gift opener is still holding their original gift then he gets to have the last chance to steal or can decide to keep it.  This way, if the first gift opened was less than desirable, they aren’t stuck with it and get the opportunity to swap it out with any other gift that is still “open” of their choice.  (Again, establish whether or not this rule will be enforced prior to game time!)

5. Encourage stealing!  If friends are too shy to steal a prize from another, and everyone ends up opening a new gift each turn, then the game will be over in a matter of minutes.  The more stealing there is, the more fun is had!

 

GIFT IDEAS:

DET DSanta Tips for a great Dirty Santa Gift Exchange


1.  I know “snuggies” may be overdone as gag gifts (and SUPER overdone as ‘real’ gifts), but who could resist a through-back to childhood with this Rainbow Brite Snuggler??  image via 80sTees.com

2. An original Nintendo NES game controller iPhone cover!  image via Tick and Pick Etsy Shop

3.  NinjaBread Men are way more fun to eat.  These cookie cutters paired with some cookie dough is a definite hit.  image via ThinkGeek

4.  HandleBar mustache corkscrew, along with a nice bottle of wine, is definitely sure to be stolen!  image via Fred Flare

5.  And you can never go wrong with a pack or case of a favorite beverage, especially if it is dressed up for Christmas.  image via Pinterest, original source unknown

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