Wednesday, December 31, 2014

New Year, New Beginnings

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


As I sit here at home, with all the madness of Christmas behind me, and having recently returned from a wonderful action-packed winter holiday, I cannot help but ponder what the new year has in store for my loved ones and me.

Tonight, we shall spend a quiet evening at home, enjoying a celebratory home-cooked dinner, seated around our dining room table.  I know this will be a real treat on the heels of enjoying more than a little fine cuisine and quite a bit of imbibing during our recent adventures (too much of a good thing, and all that!).

At the stroke of midnight, we'll clink our flutes and toast the dawn of a new year, full of glorious hope and eager anticipation of new beginnings.

I wish you all a joyous and wonderful year ahead and may we all share in another opportunity to get it right, or as right as we are able, which for me means no resolutions, just new beginnings.

How do you plan to celebrate this evening and do you tend to make and/or keep resolutions?



Monday, December 22, 2014

The Golden Glow of Christmas

In our household, we have always decorated an evergreen tree for the years we celebrate Christmas at home.  My family and I enjoy the scent and appearance of real trees, excitedly brought into the house a week or so before Christmas day, and trimmed shortly thereafter with my ever-expanding collection of vintage glass ornaments.  Aside from the tree, various seasonal evergreen boughs are tucked within the tops of picture frames and mirrors, or hung in garlands around the front door.  Of course no Christmas is complete without a few wreaths of fragrant laurel or cedar.

As we shall be far from home during the Christmas holidays this year, we have opted to forgo our traditional evergreen tree and instead decorate only our small ivory colored goose feather one.  I purchased the tree about fifteen years ago, when I came across a catalog by The Feather Tree Co., a small American family-owned business that makes replicas of German goose feather trees by hand. These artificial trees were popular Christmas items in nineteenth century Germany and offered a solution to the rampant problem of deforestation.  A few years after my daughter was born, I ordered a second feather tree so that she too should have one to use in her own home when her time comes to fly the coop.  I'm so glad I did as the husband and wife team who labor over their creations recently announced their retirement and are no longer supplying their happy customers with these enchanting diminutive heirloom-worthy trees.

Chronica Domus
Our feather tree takes pride of place in the drawing room this year
Photo: Chronica Domus


We dressed the tree in shades of gold, silver, and green, and used a selection of ornaments in the form of pine cones, berries, and nuts.

Chronica Domus
A vintage glass walnut appears quite realistic
Photo: Chronica Domus


I've long had a weakness for pine cone ornaments and have collected quite a number of them in various designs and sizes over the years.  I have found little plump squat ones and slender elongated examples, dusted with crushed glass so that the cones twinkle when caught in just the right light. I am especially fond of those made during the 1940's in occupied Japan, and have found those in the colors you see upon our tree, as well as in vibrant turquoise and pink.  I adore how they are embellished with white paint to simulate freshly fallen snow.

Chronica Domus
Golden Japanese pine cones and green 
berries drip from feather boughs
Photo: Chronica Domus


Chronica Domus
Yet more pine cones fill a Paris porcelain punch bowl in a corner of the drawing room, collected on my walks and coated in clear glitter affording them a frosty appearance
Photo: Chronica Domus


To continue the color theme, I placed several variously sized balls in a pair of Anglo-Irish cut glass footed bowls either side of the tree.  I love the way they look grouped together. 

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


I'm not certain what these little snowball-like ornaments are supposed to be, but I think them quite charming.  They are made of spun cotton and crushed glass which makes them glisten in the candlelight.  They remind me of the icy snowballs I used to hurl at my sisters when we were all rather silly girls playing in the snow outside our house in Kent.  In fact, we are still rather silly girls, but a little older and possibly a little wiser, but that is, of course, debatable once you've come to know us.

Chronica Domus
Hmmm... I see a snowball fight coming
Photo: Chronica Domus


Our tree has been placed in a nineteenth century black basalt bucket-shaped vessel that I found in England.  I've not seen another quite like it and don't exactly know what it's intended purpose is.  It is so large, one could chill a bottle of champagne in it.

To secure the tree firmly in place, I filled the vessel with an assortment of real silvered walnuts and pine cones.  I think they look marvelous alongside their glass imitators.

Chronica Domus
Silvered walnuts and pine cones fill a black basalt vessel
Photo: Chronica Domus


A dainty silvery-grey satin ribbon, a trio of miniature glass balls, and a home-made pipe cleaner star crown the top of this year's tree.

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


But wait a minute, aren't you all wondering about those small wax candles attached to the tree's branches by the little tin clips?

Chronica Domus
To light, or not to light, that is the question 
Photo: Chronica Domus


Yes, I must confess, it would be a huge thrill for this author if she were to see our little confection of a tree all aglow in candlelight.  However, in the interest of marital harmony, I have promised my dear husband that I shall refrain from my pyrotechnic fantasies and keep the matchsticks far away from the candles.

Chronica Domus
Alas, the only allowable flames are those that flicker from our blazing fireplace
Photo: Chronica Domus


Except, that is, for maybe... just... this... one.

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus

Wherever you may find yourself this Christmas, I wish you and yours glad tidings and a very merry Christmas.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

What do you eat on Christmas Day?

Chronica Domus
An English Christmas pudding ready to be doused in brandy and set aflame
Photo: Chronica Domus


Ask most Brits to describe what they'll be feasting upon as part of their Christmas day celebratory dinner and the answer will likely involve the following: a plump roasted turkey, sage and onion stuffing, little Chipolata sausages wrapped in bacon, cranberry sauce, roasted potatoes, Brussels sprouts, carrots or parsnips, gravy, Christmas (plum) pudding with hard sauce or cream, and a good Stilton cheese with crackers, all washed down with port wine.  Oh, and lest we forget, delicious little mince pies.

Chronica Domus
English mince pies and German Stollen are excellent sweet treats on Christmas day
Photo: Chronica Domus

Ask an American the same question and you will likely be as surprised as I am to learn of the plethora of answers you will receive. Unlike Thanksgiving day, where American food traditions waver little across the miles, I don't think I've ever come across two families that share the same Christmas day food traditions.

Please help me unravel the mysteries of a traditional Christmas day meal in your country of residence by letting me know what it is that you enjoy eating on Christmas day, and whether or not your menu is dictated by either national or family traditions.


Sunday, December 14, 2014

An Unusual Glass Ornament Steeped In British Folklore

Chronica Domus
My green 19th century "witches ball" photographed alongside a German silver kugel ornament, and two miniature Japanese green baubles dating from around World War II
Photo: Chronica Domus


I've been busy excitedly rummaging through boxes of ornaments selecting those that will grace our Christmas tree, which will be decorated within the next week.  I try to be organized about such matters as the storage of my hundreds of vintage and antique glass ornaments which I've amassed over the period I've been living in the United States.  I endeavor to sort them by color, wrap the larger ones in tissue paper (acid free if possible), and then place them all in large plastic storage boxes until they are needed the following year.  You will be hard pressed to find another plastic item in our household but these boxes are the best solution I've come across for safe storage.

Over the past two decades, I've been agog at the sheer volume of vintage glass ornaments that I've been fortunate enough to unearth from places like local flea markets, antiques shops and shows, as well as from thrift stores. I've concluded that such ornaments were probably destroyed by the thousands during the German bombing campaigns of World War II in England, hence their rarity there.  Why else have I had such a difficult time locating them?  One can find newer reproductions, of course, but the more fragile older examples are as rare as hen's teeth.

The majority of my collection dates from the 1920's to 1940's, with a few later examples and even several earlier ones.  Most were produced in Germany at the famous glass factories of Lauschen by mouth blowing glass into molds.  I've also collected many Japanese examples dating from America's occupation of Japan after World War II, and some later ones (1950's) from the other famous European centers of glass production, Poland and Czechoslovakia.

I remember my mother adorning our family tree with similar ornaments when I was a young girl so perhaps that is why I'm drawn to decorating my own tree with these beguiling ornaments which have mellowed to a wonderful dull sheen over the years.

Several summer's ago, when ambling through the covered antiques market in Covent Garden, London, I came across a monumental green glass ornament that reminded me of a much smaller silver example in my collection.  I'd never seen anything approaching the scale of this heavy glass orb.  I asked the stall-holder about it and he explained to me that it was a "witches ball". The huge bauble, which is six inches in diameter, came complete with the original decorative brass hanging chain, embossed with baskets of flowers, and twisted little connecting rings, crowned with a brass cap and a large round hanging loop. I was further informed that according to British folklore, these witches balls, typically made in green, silver and gold, were hung in windows or in front of looking glasses during the 18th and 19th centuries to ward off evil spirits and ill fortune. I was fascinated by the history of this glass treasure and could not pass it up, even if it meant that I had to carefully hand-carry it across the pond on my journey home.

I am delighted I did so, as each year when unwrapping my ornaments to decorate the house at Christmastime, the enchanting witches ball always takes my breath away. Although its folkloric origin is far removed from Christmas traditions, which also happens to be the case with many other symbols of a modern Christmas, this witches ball fits in seamlessly holding court over my large collection of more diminutive ornaments.  I've since learned that the balls are rather rare, and the chain even more so.

Have you a favorite or meaningful ornament that you enjoy displaying during the Christmas holiday season?  Do please tell me about it.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Seasonal Postal Greetings - A Thing of The Past?

Chronica Domus
A selection of past Christmas cards I've received and saved, displayed for the purpose of this blog post
Photo: Chronica Domus

When I was growing up in England, sending Christmas cards, or should that be holiday cards, as they are more commonly referred to in America, was an act which heralded the beginning of the Christmas season in our household.  My mother always wrote and addressed each card by hand, and those that were to be sent overseas were posted first, followed a week later by cards that would reach addresses throughout our fair isles. By mid-December, all of our cards had been safely dispatched via the services of the Royal Mail.

My sisters and I would delight at the postman's deliveries made in the weeks prior to Christmas because we knew there would be at least one, if not more, Christmas cards within the pedestrian pile of printed correspondence and bills that got pushed through our letterbox daily.  We looked forward to opening those cards as much as we enjoyed opening the little windows on our advent calendar.  If we received a card from foreign lands, as we did most years from friends and family that lived across the globe, we would study the interesting stamps and their designs, and then reflect upon how that country differed in its celebrations of Christmas.  The cards within those envelopes not only brought good cheer and merriment to our family, but also provided us the opportunity to think about the senders as it was unlikely we would have the chance of visiting them personally over the Christmas and New Year period.

My mother would display the cards we received on the mantel shelf and also attach them to little makeshift "clotheslines" as I called them, with tiny pegs, strung across backs of doors, or on ribbons cascading down the tall pocket doors of our drawing room.

Today, in my own household, I like to do much the same as my mother in terms of taking the time to hand-write and address my cards, and pop them in the mail within the first two weeks of December. I enjoy both sending and receiving cards, and have kept many of the ones sent to me over the years.  I do this for sentimental reasons, and for the fact that I enjoyed the design of the card that was thoughtfully selected and written to me.  They are reminders of friends and family, and that their generosity of spirit and good wishes still live on whenever I get the urge to look through my stack of saved cards.

For the reasons stated above, the modern trend for sending seasonal greetings via electronic-mail leaves me dumbfounded.  Does anyone actually think this is a good idea?  I am afraid that such electronic cards have as much longevity as the majority of junk mail that floods my e-mail box daily. These "cards" lack warmth and personality, and more than likely will not be seen by the other members of the family to which they are being sent.

I do realize one must invest a certain amount of time in sending cards during the holiday season and, of course, the nominal expense involved in acquiring said cards and associated postage fees. However, if you select your recipient list with as much care as you will have taken in your card selection and hand-written message, your thoughtfulness will reach your most beloved family members and friends, delighting and overjoying them with happiness, which is after all, part of the generosity of spirit associated with the Christmas holiday season.

Do you enjoy sending and receiving Christmas holiday cards through the mail, or have you succumbed to the more modern electronic trend of e-cards?

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