Category Archives: Collections

Nativities

My Nativity

I purchased this nativity at a wonderful store called Jackalope in Santa Fe, New Mexico several years ago. I believe it was made in Mexico.

Religious CrecheGermany

250px-Neapolitan_nativity_scene Portugal
Folk Art Creche

A nativity scene may be used to describe any depiction of the Nativity of Jesus in art,but in the sense covered here, also called a crib or manger in the UK and crèche in France (meaning “crib” or “manger” French), it means a three-dimensional commercial or folk art depiction of the birth or birthplace of Jesus,  either sculpted or using two-dimensional (cut-out) figures arranged in a three-dimensional setting.

After his return to Italy from a voyage to Egypt and Acre in 1220, St Francis of Assisi introduced three-dimensional nativity scenes. Some accounts state he used statues or costumed people, but Thomas of Celano,biographer of Francis tells how he only used a straw-filled manger(feeding trough) set between a real ox and donkey. According to Thomas, it was beautiful in its simplicity with the manger acting as the altar for the Christmas Mass. Francis’s first biographer, Brother Tommaso da Celano, says that Francis was merely emulating what he had seen elsewhere in previous years when, in 1223, he asked his friend Giovanni Velita, a nobleman from the nearby town of Greccio, to construct a nativity scene, consisting of the straw-filled manger, ox and donkey, in a cave near the town of Greccio, for a Christmas Eve mass at which Francis preached.

Reference Wikipedia and New York Times

England Swings

‘England Swings’ by HappiNestHome

All eyes are on London, England this week watching the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate. The title of this treasury is from a Roger Miller song popular in the swinging sixties.

$235.00

$30.00

$29.00

$175.00

$22.00

$190.00

$8.00

$24.50

$62.00

$25.00

$2.00

$52.00

$7.00

$35.00

$45.50

$49.00

Treasury tool by Red Row Studio.

Mercury Glass

Yesterday my routine supply of catalogs came in the mail. One of them was from Pottery Barn which is one catalog I usually keep. I was delighted to see so many items in silvery mercury glass. Hence, I decided to do some investigating to learn more about this glass with the tarnished patina. This is what I found out on Martha Stewart’s website.

Mercury glass is also known as silvered glass or poor man’s silver does not contain mercury or silver. It’s actually clear glass, mold-blown into double-walled shapes and coated on the inside with a silvering formula, which is inserted though a small hole that is then sealed with a plug.

First discovered in early-19th-century Germany, mercury glass was used as an inexpensive and tarnish-free substitute for silver in such objects as candlesticks and doorknobs. It then gained favor in France and England, where it was made into useful household wares like vases and goblets, and in America, where it was turned into glass vases, goblets, tankards, sugar basins, tumblers, and even spittoons. After briefly falling out of favor, mercury glass reappeared around 1900 in the form of pretty Christmas ornaments and gazing balls, as well as blown fruits and flowers. Today, most serious collectors concentrate on antique forms, like curtain pins, salt cellars, or pedestal-footed silvered vases.

Here are some of the mercury glass products I found for sale searching the internet today:

Websites to find products:  Apartment 48, Ballard DesignElizabeth’s Embellishments, HorchowNapa StylePottery Barn, The Garden Gates, and Antique Mercury Glass.

Small Vases

Making floral arrangements in small vases is a wonderful way to enhance your dinner table and party events. Small vases enable you to use a limited amount of flowers while still adding a nice effect to your table design. They are small enough that they don’t interfere with the view of your guests at the dinner table as you are eating. Proportion and scale are added to their minimal size by punching up the number of vases in the overall arrangement display.  The vases shown here were purchased through the Wisteria catalog and at the Pier 1 store.  This particular theme was done for a Christmas event.  I have used these vases for many different occasions.