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Decorating Your RV for the Holidays:
Come On In And Smell Christmas
By Coleen Sykora
There's
a pan of gingerbread baking in my RV oven. It smells wonderful. It smells
like Christmas!
That mug of candy canes on my desk? I occasionally nibble on one and
I sometimes use one to stir my tea. But mainly I sniff them. There's something
rejuvenating about peppermint. And, they smell like Christmas!
That huge candle on my bathroom vanity, the one with cinnamon sticks
and red berries in it - it has the best scent you can imagine. It smells
like Christmas!
I decorate for all my senses. Our RV home is small. I have neither the
room to display nor to store boxes and boxes of holiday decorations. I've
learned to compensate by involving my senses of smell, taste, touch, and
hearing as well as vision.
Here
are some hints and things I've learned about decorating a small home (but
they will work for those of you with large homes, too) …
- Use your holiday decorations. Our regular cloth placemats and napkins
are put away and we use the Christmas ones. (If they get spaghetti
sauce on them, so what?) And those pretty candles - they get lit and
burned.
- Let your holiday festoons do double or triple duty - such as that
gingerbread that not only smells like Christmas but tastes like it,
too. Or, those candy canes that smell, taste, and look like Christmas.
- Look beyond an item's intended purpose. Our puppy received an adorable
stuffed reindeer toy for a Christmas gift. It has a nubby fur body,
velvet antlers, and a brightly colored knitted scarf. It sits on our
window valance, adding a whimsical touch.
- Keep tradition. Although we've never had a fireplace, I can't remember
a Christmas when we didn't hang stockings. Last year, we pinned them
to the curtains. This year, we screwed small cup hooks to the underside
of the overhead cabinets and the stockings hang in a row at the foot
of our bed.
- Have a focal point. I have a small quilt draped over the curtain
opposite the front door. When you open the door and look in our trailer,
it is the first thing you see - bold, colorful, and dramatic.
- Take advantage of small wall spaces. I don't have room to hang large
paintings. Instead, I use tree ornaments as wall hangings. In the
tiniest of spaces, I hang a single ornament. In the somewhat larger
areas, I make a grouping of several ornaments that have something
in common - such as three Santas, or a small collection of brass ornaments.
- Use free decorations. A basket of evergreen branches (trimmings
picked up at a tree lot) and pinecones (picked from our yard) tied
with a red ribbon looks festive on the counter. The cat loves to play
in them. When she bruises the needles, the fragrance oils are released
and the room is lightly scented with pine.
- Decorate with things meant to disappear. My centerpiece is a container
of seasonal fruit and candy. Family and friends are encouraged to
help themselves to these goodies. I replenish it with different treats
throughout the season.
- Create a mood. We fill our home with seasonal music - carols, fun
childhood favorites, and new renditions by country artists. I answer
the phone with, "Merry Christmas!" And sometimes, in the dark of evening,
we just stand watching the twinkling of tiny lights on our 10-inch
tall Christmas tree and think about why it is that we celebrate Christmas
in the first place.
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