M E R R Y C H R I S T M A S ! !
I made a lighted Christmas glass block as a gift for my secret Santa gift this year - I loved how it turned out and especially how pretty it was when the lights inside were plugged in! The crumbcake tulle from Stampin Up's holiday catalog was wrapped around the ends of the block and tied into a bow on top and the pleated satin ribbon around the pictures on both sides is a retired Stampin Up item, as well as the little tinsel-type bow. You can still get the tulle ribbon as the holiday catalog doesn't end until Jan. 2nd!
The first Christmas Tree lit with
electrical lights was in 1882. Edward H Johnson, an associate of inventor
Thomas Edison, was Vice-President of the Edison Electric Light Company, which
is now known as Con Edison. Johnson had bulbs the size of walnuts, hand wired,
in red, blue and white specially made for him. They were initially called
Christmas Tree Lamps! The tree was in his private home on Fifth Avenue in New
York City. Most newspapers ignored this phenomenon considering it a marketing
ploy. The story was published in a Detroit newspaper which dubbed him as the
“Father of Electric Christmas Lights.” By 1900, businesses started stringing
lights in their windows. For the average person, this was still an expensive
decoration. Up until 1930, candles were still used in most homes, and then
lights started becoming the majority replacement in most homes.
In 1895, President Grover Cleveland
proudly displayed the first electrically lit tree in the White House. It was a
huge tree featuring more than 100 multicolored lights. The first commercially
manufactured Christmas tree lamps were produced by General Electric Co of
Harrison, NJ. They were strings of multiples 8 sockets and each socket took a
miniature two-candela carbon-filament lamp. From that point on electrically
illuminated Christmas trees, but only indoors, grew with mounting enthusiasm in
the United States and elsewhere.
The cube I made has a string of 50 lights inside it along with a silver and gold glittery garland.
I used 2 Thomas Kinkade pictures on the large flat sides of the cube so it is reversible! The Stampin Up red sticky tape worked great to adhere everything to the glass.
The other 2 white ribbons used were from another craft store - one of them is a wired ribbon so it can be puffed up into a beautiful bow that stands up nicely.
I just bought some purple mini-lights on sale so I can make up one of these glass blocks for myself!
One popular tradition of Christmas
is singing Christmas carols. These traditions have their origins in the past
well before the terminology “Christmas Carols” was actualized. Most of the
popular carols were written in the 19th century and were sung from
house to house near the Christmas season. The Church adopted this tradition in
the 1820’s, giving these songs a greater sense of reverence. Hence the term
“Christmas Carols” was born.
Popular Christmas Carols, their
author, and the year they were written –
Away in the Manger – James Murray –
1885
Deck the Hall’s – John Perry Ddall –
1784
God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen – author
unknown – most likely written in the 1700’s
Hark the Herald Angels Sing – Felix
Mendelssohn – 1840
I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day –
Henry Longfellow – 1863
It Came Upon a Midnight Clear –
Edmund Sears – 1849
Jingle Bells – James Pierpont – 1857
Joy to the World – Isaac Watts –
1719
Messiah – George Frideric Handel -
1741
O Christmas Tree – Ernst Anschutz –
1824
O Come All Ye Faithful – John Wade
et al – 1200’s
O Come, O Come Emanuel – John Mason
Neale – mid 1800’s
O Holy Night – Adolphe Adam – 1847
O Little Town of Bethlehem –
Phillips Brooks – 1865
Silent Night – Joseph Mohr – 1816
The First Noel – Davies Gilbert –
1700’s
Twelve Days of Christmas – author
unknown – 1500’s
We Wish you a Merry Christmas –
author unknown – 1500’s
No comments:
Post a Comment