Search
Recommended Products
Related Links

 

 

Informative Articles

Bridal Hair Stylist Goes Above and Beyond the Call of Duty
What you should look for in selecting your wedding hair stylist You are locked in your seat on the most famous roller coaster in the world, the Cyclone in Brooklyn, New York. Your fiancé is right next to you, both of you dressed in wedding...

Highland Photography of Las Vegas - Award-winning service
Highland is not one of those Las Vegas photographers that gets paired with a theme chapel. This fine service offers all that is best about Las Vegas wedding photography, including award winning credentials, years of expert service, and an eagerness...

Plastic Fantastic- Recycling of Plastic into steel making
PLASTIC FANTASTIC Engineers at the University of N.S.W have come up with a way to reuse plastic waste to produce steel. •In Australia, every year over 1,000,000 tonnes of plastic is put into landfill. •Only 10% of total waste plastic is ever...

The Surrender of the Ego
Almost everyone knows someone that professes to "know everything." These people are never wrong, seldom accept advice and once they stake out a position, they will do anything to defend it. At best, they are perfectionists. At worst, they...

Twists on Classic Games for Wedding Showers
When it comes to throwing a wedding shower, do not forget to include classic Games for Wedding Showers. Over the years, guests have come to expect to play these fun games, but many variations have been created of these classics to...

 
The Gratitude Wreath


Bring a little bit of autumn indoors. Family and friends help create this wreath by sharing what they are thankful for on brightly colored leaves. Every member of the family can contribute to this beautiful wreath. This is a great, concrete, visual way to put meaning back in the holidays for children.

Materials:


  • 18-inch diameter straw wreath

  • Fall leaves

  • 1 or 2 metallic paint pens

  • 3 1/2-yards of 1/4-inch elastic

  • 1 straight pin


Directions

1. Fill a large grocery sack with sturdy fall leaves.

2. As a base, use an 18-inch diameter straw wreath.

3. Wrap the wreath with the elastic. Start by securing one end of the elastic to the top of the wreath with a long straight pin. Wrap the elastic around the wreath at 3-inch intervals. The elastic should be snug against the straw, but not too tight. Once you have gone all the way around the wreath, tie the ends of the elastic together.

4. Using a paint pen on the leaves, have each member of the family write down what they are most thankful for.

5. Starting at the top and working clockwise, tuck the stems of two or three leaves into each band of elastic. Try to arrange the leaves so that


Robots Encountering Socks
Suppose you're a robot. If you had a camera in your head, and you could watch a human doing a simple task, like bunching a pair of socks, could you, just by watching, learn to do it too?

Two Deaths: A Poet And A Beetle
Poet Wislawa Szymborska had an eye for the smallest, the gentlest, the hard-to-notice creatures on Earth and this week she bid them all adieu. Krulwich remembers Wislawa Szymborska.


no elastic or straw shows. This wreath should take about 15 minutes to construct. Hang the finished wreath on the front door and celebrate all of your family's blessings.

We leave a basket of leaves near the door, and on Thanksgiving Day, all of our guests add their blessings to our wreath.

--

You have permission to reprint this article electronically or in print, free of charge, provided that each article is:


  1. Printed in its full form with no changes

  2. Includes an active link

  3. A courtesy copy of your publication is sent to the above contact

  4. And the following byline appears at the bottom of each article:


Rondi Hillstrom Davis and Janell Sewall Oakes are the co-authors of the award-winning book Together: Creating Family Traditions. To check out their website that's jam packed with family ideas, visit http://www.togetherparenting.com.

To subscribe to their online newsletter, go to http://www.togetherparenting.com/feedback.asp

Copyright Nine Twenty Press

info@togetherparenting.com