On Wednesday, between turns to the laundry room in the basement, I also got some of my boxes for Christmas ornaments from my storage room up to the flat, and got started on gradually packing up Christmas. The first thing I did was to fit this little wooden tree and its tiny ornaments back in the right compartments - which is in itself like laying a puzzle...
Next to be packed up were all the various Santas/gnomes spread out all over the flat. All too often I forget one or two, so I left that box open for a couple of days before I finally shut the lid on it today. The ones dancing on my bathroom wall were the last to jump in this time...
(They used to belong to my mum, who used to have them in her kitchen.)
Yesterday I said goodnight to all the angels and tucked those in; and today I've packed up the Nativity scene on the shelf in my study. (Cf post from 14 December.) The normal residents on that shelf have now reclaimed their usual places. (Only leightweight objects can be put on that shelf as it's not all that securely fastened to the wall...)
The watercolour underneath was painted by me 30 years ago. I seem to recall that I copied it "freehand" (not sketching first but just painting) from a photo in a magazine - maybe an advertisment. The 1990s was a period of my life when I also participated in various water colour classes now and then. (A major reason I've not kept it up is a later injury causing longlasting shoulder/arm problems. I turned to photography instead, which became so much easier with digital cameras and computers - and blogging...)
My other little Christmas tree, electric candleholders and window stars still remain to be taken down over the next few days. Some textiles that I see more as "winter" than just Christmas will probably stay up for a while longer, though. (Like my red/white kitchen curtains, and some table runners.)
The "traditional" date in Sweden to "throw out" Christmas is 13th January. Nowadays it varies a lot more. Back in my childhood, when most mothers were stay-at-home moms (housewives), it was common to have special children's parties on or around that date, before throwing out the Christmas tree. The Swedish word for it is julgransplundring, which literally means "plundering the Christmas tree". Originally, I think the tradition stems from a time when the Christmas trees were primarily decorated with edible things (cookies, apples, nuts etc). Not so common any more in the 1960s; but the party might still involve eating the gingerbread house, or the last of other cookies baked for the holidays. Games were played, and if there was room enough, one might dance around the tree. And it was also still part of the tradition that each child got a goodie bag to take home with them at the end of the party.
Below is a photo of my very first such party. I'm the one to the right, with two bows in my hair. The year is 1960, I'm 5 years old and the photo is from the kitchen table in the house I had moved into some six months earlier with my parents. The three other girls lived in neighbouring houses, one next door and the two others across the street. Two of them a year older than me I think, and one a year younger. And it looks like my mum even baked a cake for the occasion.
The first thing I noticed and loved is your gorgeous painting of the girl on the bench!!! I love it, it is so wonderful! You really have a talent, and I am so sorry your injury caused you to stop painting. Strange how God gifts us with these things, then for some reason, we can't use them. I love the little bathroom tile elves! What are they, decals? If so, I will look on amazon for some. I have these little wooden trees, you probably saw the white one in my Christmas decor post. I also have the green and the brown. What a treasure this party photo is!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Ginny. For whatever reasons, different talents and interests may just dominate different seasons of our life, I suppose. ("To every thing there is a season...", as the book of Ecclesiastes says...)
DeleteThe "elves" must be 50-60 years old now and were evidently made from some kind of magic "forever sticky" plastic material. They only stick to smooth and clean surfaces like tiles - but they stlll work. I can't recall ever having seen any apart from that set of by now antique ones inherited from my mum, so I doubt you'll find any on Amazon...
Your watercolour painting sounds like a cherished memory and a testament to your artistic talent and creativity
ReplyDeleteThanks Ro. It's not the only one I've kept, it just happened to get into focus as I was rearranging things on the shelf above... :)
Deletethe painting is really good, so sorry you had to stop, like Ginny I see true talent. I like how the red tree fits in its own box, I have the box that the nativity fits in perfectly. glad you are getting your flat back to normal. yes leave those pretty curtains, I just love the cheery look they give in your photos. I have not heard about the parties to take down the tree but it makes sense.
ReplyDeleteThanks Sandra. I think we are all born with more than one talent, and any number of things may affect which ones we come to develop the most - and at what point in our life, and how...
DeleteWell aside from your photo making me feel really really old (I graduated from high school in 1960), I loved the little party with new friends. Moving always meant making new friends for my youngest son. And once we had a birthday party within a few weeks of his being in a new house, inviting some from school and some from the neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteBarbara, that photo is making my feel really old myself! ;-) There were no kindergartens or similar back in those days, so the children one met before starting school (at age 7) were just those living very close by.
DeleteI am not surprised at your artistic talent, Monica - your Mum was great at drawing/painting/sewing and so on, and you are her daughter :-) Is your brother artistically inclined, too?
ReplyDeleteHere, the 6th of January is the most traditional day for packing up Christmas, but in predominantly Catholic areas (such as where O.K. lives), people may wait as long as the 2nd of Februrary (Mariä Lichtmess) - not for the tree, which is usually thrown out earlier because it will be in a sorry state if it's a real one. I don't think it has ever been a tradition in Germany to have children's parties for that event, but it makes sense that people would want to create an event around that, to finish off the edible decorations and leftover cookies, and so on.
Love the picture! Did you become proper friends with the girls living so close to you? When my sister and I moved to the middle one of three terraced houses in 1974 (I was turning 6 and my sister had just turned 7), we quickly made friends with a pair of sisters our age living on the other side of the wall from us - and we've become friends for life.
Meike, my brother has no doubt inherited some artistic talents too, but only (as far as I know) had a very short period of trying his hand at painting (with acrylics, back in his mid twenties or so).More dominant talents/interests of his are in music and computer technology. Which he as also managed to combine in creating "electronic" music. (Only as a hobby, though.) - The artistic traits probably inherited from our maternal grandfather's side of the family; while our dad was an engineer (and his father in turn a journalist and photographer). For my own part, I was never any good at technology (yes, I have learned to use computers for work and play - but I can't take one apart and make sense of HOW it actually works...). And even if I like music, I can't compose it. (I struggled with piano lessons from 4th to 6th grade in school but never got any good, and didn't keep up even the little I had learned. Whereas my brother took naturally to it from start and never quit.)
DeleteAs for my childhood friends in the photo, none of them became life-long friends. The youngest I kept in touch with through my teens, but she got married very young (18), whereas I moved away not long after, to study in another town (and I never moved back to my "home" town after that).
Last Christmas was the first time that I didn't put any decorations up at all! I just put out the cards I received and made that do. This year I plan to donate my many decorations to charity shops, no point in keeping them if I don't use them. I think I shall keep my advent candles - they are easy to put out and store away 'between times.
ReplyDeleteThat painting is lovely, Monica, you have talent - such a pity that injury prevented you from continuing.
Carol, I suspect that if I lived in a warmer climate, I'd probably skip a lot of my wintry Christmas decorations. The main point of them is really to cheer up the darkest weeks of the year. :)
DeleteWhat lovely traditions you have, and sweet memories attached to your decorations.
ReplyDeleteWe have only just, today, put away our Christmas tree, this year with all the decorations still in place, which we have never done before. I expect I shall undress and redress it again next December! i have always made sure all Christmas decor is tidied away on Twelfth Night, though I'm not superstitious.
Sweet painting - such talent that has now had to find other outlets - sometimes that's a gift!
Thanks Janice. Our traditions as well as interests and hobbies do tend to go through some changes (or developments) over the years - whether because of health or other reasons!
DeleteHi. I have just popped by from Yorkshire Pudding. Here all Christmas decorations need to be down by Twelfth Night which is 6 January, or else it brings bad luck. I wonder why the different date in Sweden. I am guessing a different superstition.
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting, Addy! There is a Wikipedia article that explains the different dates: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Knut%27s_Day
Delete13th January, the 20th Day of Christmas, is also known as St Knut's Day here. Originally this old saint was celebrated on the 7th, but as that coincided with the celebration of Epiphany (the Magi visiting the Christ child), here in Sweden (+ Finland) it was decided, as far back in history as 1680, to move the Feast of St Knut forward one week. And the traditions of when to throw out Christmas followed Knut. I've never heard any superstitions connected with it, but there is an old rhyme that simply says: "Tjugondag Knut dansas julen ut." (On the Twentieth Day Knut, Christmas is cast out with dancing.)