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Holiday Gift Wrapping
How to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Your Holidays - Without Being
Cheap!...
by Sherry Gordon
Description: Christmas gift giving and decorating ideas for the truly frugal.
Sponsors:
So many of us are disturbed by the commercialism and extravagance
of the end-of-the-year holidays... Much that should be adding
to our pleasure becomes a burden, both financially and
psychologically. ...Yet there are many ways to be frugal and
giving - in fact, richly - and to conserve resources into the
bargain.
True, buying "new" might stimulate the business sector of the
economy... But well, my economy probably has to be of first
importance! Too, purchasing (where one has to purchase) used
items does a world of good in one's community as well - it
stimulates the non-profit and private sectors of the economy, as
it were, individuals bolstering their finances by selling/
bartering, good-doing organizations dependent on "rummage" sales,
and -both- businesses and individuals gaining via the tax
benefits from items donated to non-profits.
In any case, many aspects of holiday celebration are open to
"interpretation" in the light of "The Three Rs" (as waste
reduction folks like to call the frugality of conservation). And
whether one is directly concerned with resource conservation or
not, reducing, reusing, and recycling can be a whole lot of fun!
-- What -is- frugality?
"Frugal", in my vocabulary, doesn't necessarily mean "cheap" - or
even, necessarily, inexpensive. ...Not meagerness, just not
ostentation. To me, frugality means "what is just enough" - what
is right for the circumstances... the people, the occasion.
This is my philosophy of gift-giving: Apt meaning is what's
important. What's right could be expensive, but if the gift
is "right", the expense wouldn't be extravagant (if the giver
can afford that, and the receiver will truly appreciate it).
Limiting yourself to the inexpensive no matter what might mean
limiting the impact of your gift, and the pleasure of making
gifts meaningful,
in multiple layers of meaning, is one of the things I receive
from giving. (Of course, if your budget is mighty slim,
inexpensive giving would likely be de rigueur... In which case
you can have the fun of coming up with just the right
inexpensive gift!)
But oh, how much an apt inexpensive or free gift can give!...
If you found a lovely crystal formation, for instance (or owned
one you were willing to part with), imagine the delight it could
bring to a giftee sensitive to its beauty. Or consider the
pleasure a house-bound aunt would take in being given a coupon
for a monthly hair appointment in her home. (There, look at the
layering... A visit; a spruce-up perhaps not otherwise
affordable; another layer if the stylist were you - and another
if you brought your toddler along.
The holidays, after all, are meant to be meaningful - otherwise,
what is celebration for? They you can certainly be frugal
without diminishing their meaning one iota... In fact, you might
agree that some appropriate frugality might add to your (and
others') enjoyment of Christmas, Hannukah, the New Year, or
whatever you celebrate.
And if reducing, reusing, and recycling gives you pleasure - out
of a desire to conserve resources and/or money, or just to open
up the gift-giving spectrum - here are some ideas for
incorporating The Three Rs "resourcefully" into the holidays...
-- Greetings:
- There's recycled paper, of course.
- Make greeting postcards out of the fronts of folded greeting
cards you received in previous years.
- Use the interesting outer portion of an old card front as the
frame for a new design.
- Cut those folded card fronts up... Glue one shape, or make a
simple collage of a few, onto the front of a blank folded card -
or make a glued mosaic of bits (cut from the colorful parts you
would otherwise have discarded).
- Use your children's artwork on the fronts instead.
- Or family photos (I always get double prints, do you? - and
then I have extras lying around!).
- Make the paper.
-- Holiday parties:
- Have a gift exchange featuring recycled gifts (i.e., "white
elephants") - fun! (Or specifically, recycled Christmas tree
ornaments?) Children could exchange in-good-shape toys they've
tired of (and bring one for a community toy collection box).
- Ask your guests to bring excess food from homes to donate to a
food bank.
- Recycle memories - ask guests to bring their favorite holiday
memories to share with the group (backed up by photos, if
available).
- Make "stone soup" - from one over-abundant item in each guest's
refrigerator.
- Meet to glean some veggies from a local farmer's field, go back
to your house to wash them for a meals-on-wheels program (and a
treat for the guests).
- Give as "party favors" floor sweepings from a local grain
elevator, bagged up as food for guests' local birds.
- Make shrunken-wool hats or mittens (from rummaged sweaters) for
a homeless shelter.
-- Decorations:
- Make a table centerpiece from a ring of repotted herb starts -
to give to the guests as parting gifts.
- Quart jars stuffed with strings of tiny white lights make an
exquisite window decoration at night.
- Make candle luminarias to light the paths outdoors, spray-
painting tin cans that have been decorated by punching with an
awl and/or nipping with a triangle-headed can opener.
- Twist branches from a "dead" artificial tree into a wreath.
- Or a -real- "recycled wreath" can be made from chicken wire
from the back acres.
- Bringing the outdoors in can be as simple, of course, as
fanning out flat leaves as the base for a centerpiece or
spreading evergreens (even if palm fronds!) around the room.
- Even the tree might come inside and go back out at the end of
the holiday season, if it's potted. Or sometimes a bundle of
branches serves as a similar focal point and ornament hanger.
- Quilt a tree skirt from fabric scraps.
- We "reuse" decorations pleasurably through the years, of
course... That's how they become heirlooms, all those creche
sets and tree ornaments and door hangers, etc.
- But maybe one year, use -real- stockings for everybody - wake
'em up!
- So many ornaments can be made from the found or the reused:
old glass balls repainted or stickered; beribboned pinecones;
stuffed scrap-fabric shapes; decorated eggshells; stars cut from
aluminum pie plates, for light reflectors; lightbulbs decorated
as snowmen; magazine photos folded into wonderful origami shapes;
and just plain old found objects themselves can be fun.
- And garlands, made from: pine, fir, or spruce cones; old
jigsaw puzzle pieces; paper chains cut from greeting cards of
bygone years; crumpled aluminum foil "beads"; sea shells; old
buttons strung on bright cording; ha, excess wrapped Halloween
candies!
-- Gifts:
Some people turn up their noses at used items as gifts - but then,
that just means the frugality of such a gift wouldn't be "right"
in that case. (Though... if you pick well, maybe they wouldn't
know... or tell them and let them be amazed!)
- Scrounged nuts, divided bulbs, old bricks, and gorgeous rocks
make great gifts - all free.
- Consider adding to someone's collectibles collection from your
yard sale finds.
- Make confetti eggs, croutons from elderly bread, baby clothes
from discarded turtlenecks, necktie serpents, braided horse tail
hair bracelets, picture frames of barn wood, newspaper fire
starter pretzels, pinatas!
- If a woodworker doesn't have a subscription, back-issues of
"Fine Woodworking" would be very welcome. Or a used classical
CD for a music lover.
- Many people are lacking in nails, screws, nuts, washers, and
bolts when they need them - give 'em a jarful of oddments from
your workshop!
- Wonderful clothing can be found for those who aren't concerned
with the latest styles (as toddlers aren't, for instance!). How
about a dress-up box for a young girl?
- Consider wrapping these gifts in: reused wrapping paper; old
maps; scrap fabric; containers such as jars and old tins;
pictures from old calendars; painted oatmeal cylinders; fancy
foreign food bags.
- Use for decorations: pinked newspaper strip "ribbons"; reused
commercial bows; cut-out pictures; burnt-out Christmas tree light
bulbs; -painted- on ribbon; plumber's tape ribbon and bow for the
man of the house!
- Use as gift tags: bits from old greeting cards; snowman shapes
cut from plastic milk cartons; old piano keys! - or just write on
the wrapper itself.
-- The aftermath:
- Did you save good-looking wrapping paper, ribbons, and
garnishes at present-opening time? (You can even reuse gift tags
for people you're with at opening time.)
- Certain like-minded friends and I have fun passing paper back
and forth from year to year (it's one of the layers of the gift.
- Egg cartons and partitioned liquor cartons make good ornament
storage containers.
- Even a dead Christmas tree has its (re)uses!: as kindling,
branch tips in potpourri, needles covering garden paths, etc.
When we celebrate, most of us are eager to express and create
something of value for ourselves, and for others. I suppose you
could say we're training our children at the same time, to
value... what? Maybe a little deliberate conservation is good to
throw into the mix. Certainly I count it one of our blessings,
that we can make do with less - not just make do, but make a
festival, practically out of thin air.
...That's when frugality really has -panache-! Maybe there's a
fourth R: richness (in disguise).
Copyright 2002, Gordon Pioneering. Sherry Gordon lives and
writes in the Idaho backcountry and is the developer of the
websites http://www.AffiliatePrimer.com,
http://www.ThinkJointVenture.com,
and http://www.AlternativePetHealth.com.
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