I saw Memory Pillows on Pinterest. They are not Memory Foam. Rather, they are pillows made from the shirt of a loved one who has died. A friend of mine had not only her husband die this summer, but also her step-son. Their family was just the 3 of them and now she is all alone. I asked her if she had a shirt for each and I would a pillow.
Here is what I made:
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Evolution of a Christmas Card
When I designed our Christmas cards, I rarely use the first card I make but make some revisions before settling on the final design. 2015 was no different.
I started with this card.
I used a new die (edgelit) to cut out the houses on the hillside. Using the star punch, I cut lots of stars from silver foil paper. Even with the new fine tip glue pen, I had trouble getting the stars placed in the sky and it was going to take way too long to do 120+ cards. So I made a modification - and came up with this.
Instead of the silver punched out stars, I used the star embossing folder and covered the whole card front with the embossed stars.
For the inside, I started using a full 5 x 3 3/4 rectangle, but as I was cutting with the dies to get the row of houses for the front, I decided to take a rectangle of paper that was 5 x 3 3/4 and cut the bottom for the front of the card and keep the top of the rectangle for the inside of the card.
This created a second row of houses - like shadows this time.
And to share the good news with anyone who has not heard, our grandson was born on 12/7/15. He and Mommy are doing well.
I started with this card.
Final card fron |
Instead of the silver punched out stars, I used the star embossing folder and covered the whole card front with the embossed stars.
Original inside |
Final inside |
This created a second row of houses - like shadows this time.
And to share the good news with anyone who has not heard, our grandson was born on 12/7/15. He and Mommy are doing well.
Baby Derek |
Wehrheim Family Ornaments 2007 - 2016 (updated Nov 2018)
The last decade (sort of - only 9 years) of our family ornaments.
2007 was the 30th anniversary of that first Christmas when Jane put up a pair of socks for each person who was celebrating Christmas at our house. So we decided we needed something a little special. I found music buttons that played Frosty the Snowman and we put them inside these pillow type ornaments. We each stitched the snowmen, customizing the hats and scarves with our own design and colors. If you squeeze his tummy he plays the tune.
In 2008, we got together at Jane and Brian's apartment in Chicago and made these stamped ceramic stars. Stazon ink in numerous colors made the job easy.
The legend of the spider gave us an idea for these. Carol found kits to make jeweled spiders - but the spiders only had 6 legs so we had to add a couple and subsidize the kits with jewels we found at Michaels. We made these while sitting in a hotel room in Rockford IL over Halloween. It was a fun Sisters' Weekend with a tour of the Sock Monkey Museum and shopping.
Jane made the tiny books with a very condensed version of the legend. At our Christmas gathering, Carol told the whole story.
Jane visited in 2010 and we made these ribbon candies. I think a stiffer ribbon would have worked better but they are still cute. I have since seen these made with beads inserted in each loop to hold them apart).
A friend got married in January 2010 and had little snowflake cookie cutters as favors at the reception. They had quite a few left and I had seen an ornament idea using cookie cutters and ribbon so I bought some of the cookie cutters and we used them for our 2011 ornaments. Carol, Jane and I made these in a hotel room in Peoria between Wicked and the Cardinals World Series game 7 win (#11 in '11). We even had a rally squirrel - a paper mache squirrel we found at an antique store and we gave it a red ribbon.
In 2012, Jane found an idea for making a folded paper star When all folded up it made a small little square as can be seen on the left in the photo. Then you open it up and slide the button down to hold it in place and it is a 3 dimensional star. These were lots of fun to make and to play with every year when we put them on the tree. Great-niece Sydnie helped with these.
When planning the 2013 ornaments, we decided it was time to do some counted cross stitch again. We looked through lots of ideas and settled on some fun Santa designs. These are stitched on plastic canvas and then backed with some foil paper. Our niece, Jill, joined our team of stitchers again this year.
For the 2014 ornament, Jane offered to cut up an old Red Cross quilt that was made by our grandmother, Lena Pump Wehrheim. These were popular during World War I. The quilt had a white background with bright red crosses worked into it. For many years it was the quilt that Jane and I used in our bedroom. It had gotten frayed and threadbare. This way we each have a little bit of the quilt. Jane cut the stocking shapes (she said it was hard to make that first cut) and designed the ornament, then distributed the pieces to Carol and I to put together. There is a little bronze bell attached to the top of the stocking (hard to see in the picture). The bells were some that Jane had found in Aunt Nina's craft supplies. The red tag stuffed in the stocking has a short write-up about the significance of the quilt.
In 2015, we had a Sisters' Weekend in Galena IL and started on these yo-yo circle ornaments. We took a Big Shot die cut machine and cut out the felt circles in the hotel room, then divided them among the 3 of us with fabric yo-yos that Grandma Wehrheim had made.
2007 was the 30th anniversary of that first Christmas when Jane put up a pair of socks for each person who was celebrating Christmas at our house. So we decided we needed something a little special. I found music buttons that played Frosty the Snowman and we put them inside these pillow type ornaments. We each stitched the snowmen, customizing the hats and scarves with our own design and colors. If you squeeze his tummy he plays the tune.
2007 Musical Snowmen Pillows |
2008 Ceramic Stars |
Jane made the tiny books with a very condensed version of the legend. At our Christmas gathering, Carol told the whole story.
2009 Spiders and Legend |
2010 Ribbon Candy |
2011 Snowflake Cookie Cutter |
2012 Folded Star |
When planning the 2013 ornaments, we decided it was time to do some counted cross stitch again. We looked through lots of ideas and settled on some fun Santa designs. These are stitched on plastic canvas and then backed with some foil paper. Our niece, Jill, joined our team of stitchers again this year.
2013 Santa Squares |
2014 Quilt Stocking |
In 2015, we had a Sisters' Weekend in Galena IL and started on these yo-yo circle ornaments. We took a Big Shot die cut machine and cut out the felt circles in the hotel room, then divided them among the 3 of us with fabric yo-yos that Grandma Wehrheim had made.
2015 Fabric Yo-Yos
In 2016, we made these paper silhouette ornaments at Jane's home in New Richland MN before a Sisters Days (not a weekend this year) in Stillwater MN. Sadly, this was the last time Jane would be part of our ornament team as she died in 2017.
2016 Sleigh Ride Silhouettes
Wehrheim Family Ornaments 1997 - 2006
Decade three - more of our collection of handmade ornaments.
The idea for the 1997 reindeer ornaments came from a Christmas lapel pin that I saw. We stained wooden cutout hearts and glued them together to make the reindeer. Then added google eyes, a pom pom nose and a little holly decoration.
My brother, Ron, and his wife, Sue made a cute little birdhouse ornament for Dad in 1997. We liked them so much we recruited them to make one for everyone in 1998. Ron made the birdhouse and Sue painted them. So cute!
For the 1999 ornaments, we raided Mom's button box. Dad trimmed down the craft sticks for us to make these cute Christmas trees. It was fun going through all the buttons Mom had collected over the years. She would never throw away a worn our garment without taking the buttons off to use again. Bet she never thought they would wind up on family Christmas ornaments.
The idea for the 1997 reindeer ornaments came from a Christmas lapel pin that I saw. We stained wooden cutout hearts and glued them together to make the reindeer. Then added google eyes, a pom pom nose and a little holly decoration.
1997 Reindeer Hearts |
1998 Wooden Birdhouse |
1999 Button Trees |
In 2000, we three sisters spent a weekend in Grafton IL and among other things worked on these cute little gingerbread men. The heart is cut out of the felt and a piece of red fabric is glued behind the opening.
2000 Gingerbread Men |
These spool snowmen were the ornaments for 2001. We got together at Jane's house again - I think - and put these together.
2001 Spool Snowman |
I found some cute nutcracker designs in a cross-stitch magazine and we stitched those on plastic canvas for the 2002 ornament. We wanted one more design so I charted out one that looked like a wooden soldier.
2003 also found us stitching on plastic canvas. The stocking design was stitched on plastic canvas and them trimmed to the shape. We glued these to craft foam and then cut around in a stocking shape.
In 2004, we decided to do these tall Santas on a bag type ornament. We found long peppermint sticks to put inside. We each did some of these and chose the colors to use so they were all different. That summer I taught our niece, Jill, to cross stitch and she made several of the ornaments.
At our Christmas 2004 gathering, Kelly showed us another idea she had found. Dominoes were stamped with a snowman design then colored in the detail with a permanent marker. We agreed that Kelly needed to make these for the 2005 family ornament. They don't hang from the tree (although you could add some sort of hanger) but we couldn't pass up dominoes. Our family plays a lot of games and dominoes is always a hit.
I found the design for these Santa clips (clothes pin glued to the back of the canvas. We each worked on our ornaments throughout 2006. When we were almost done we realized that Jane was using a smaller count (larger squares) of plastic canvas so the ones she stitched were twice as big. So we decided the men would get the larger ones and it worked out perfectly.
2002 Nutcrackers |
2003 Plastic Canvas Stocking |
2004 Santa Bags |
2005 Snowman Dominos |
Friday, December 11, 2015
Wehrheim Family Ornaments 1987 - 1996
This is the second decade of our family ornament tradition which began in 1977.
I bought kits to make many of the ornaments in the early years. In 1987, I bought kits for styrofoam wreaths. There were at least 6 different designs (always tried to have at least 6 designs since one of the family had 6 members and I wanted them to all be different). I don't remember what many of them were but do recall one used whole cloves that were stuck into the styrofoam. Many of these did not hold up very well. Over the years we have become more selective. We not only look for durability but also try to find a way to date the ornament.
1989, was even busier. We had our first daughter in December, just 9 days before Christmas. Jane and I collaborated on these grapevine wreaths. Each cross stitch design was unique.
I found kits for these cute penquins that were very similar to the snowmen from 1983. They had red or green caps and scarves. I decided 1990 would be the last year since I had a 1 year old and was expecting our second daughter. My sisters volunteered to help so we began planning the ornaments together and dividing the work.
In 1991, we made cute cross-stitch gift bags. The fabric was glued and starched. A little piece of tissue paper was tucked inside with some sort of treat - maybe a small candy cane. And a different design for each person. We sisters planned these ornaments at our first Sisters' Weekend at the Mercy Center in St Louis. We did some shopping in St Charles and ate at a Chinese buffet where I introduced my sisters to crab rangoon.
Another favorite is the quilt square pillows we did in 1992. We designed these using a quilt book of my mom's. We each took several quilt square patterns and then designed the 'fabric' using red and green floss. Each was a unique design and so much fun to see what the others had done.
Growing up we often had a jigsaw puzzle out and most of us would work on it as we had time. So the jigsaw puzzle piece wreaths we made in 1993 had extra meaning. We three sisters and our families gathered at Jane's house over the 4th of July that year and painted the puzzle pieces, then assembled the wreaths. That was another Sisters' Weekend even though we had families in tow. The guys took the kids for the afternoon while we worked on the ornaments.
For the 1994 ornaments, I found a counted cross-stitch kit that had 12 Victorian buildings, a church, a storefront, some 'painted lady' houses, a firehouse, a gazebo, and a lighthouse. We needed 39 ornaments so if we had a thirteenth design it would all work out evenly. I combined parts of several of the designs and created a Toy Store which we made for the 3 youngest kids in the family. We also changed the Mercantile banner on the storefront to say Wehrheim's for the family business.
For the 1995 ornaments, our niece, Kelly, had found an idea in one of her craft magazines. We purchased the wooden cutout stockings and Kelly painted them. This worked out really well because 1995 was a very stressful year for the whole family with our mom's death in September after months of bed rest due to pulmonary fibrosis and our youngest brother's being hospitalized for almost 5 months due to a car accident until his death Thanksgiving weekend. Kelly's offer to paint the ornaments meant one thing we did not have to deal with.
Cutwork ornaments were the 1996 addition to the collection. The women got hearts, the men got a diamond shape and the kids got a stocking shape. The stitching is done first, then the fabric inside the stitched areas is cut away. Red gingham fabric was place behind the cutwork for these ornaments.
That completes the second decade.
I bought kits to make many of the ornaments in the early years. In 1987, I bought kits for styrofoam wreaths. There were at least 6 different designs (always tried to have at least 6 designs since one of the family had 6 members and I wanted them to all be different). I don't remember what many of them were but do recall one used whole cloves that were stuck into the styrofoam. Many of these did not hold up very well. Over the years we have become more selective. We not only look for durability but also try to find a way to date the ornament.
1987 Styrofaom Wreath |
The next year, 1988, I got married in November so did not have a lot of time to work on ornaments. I found some small card stock boxes to assemble and put a few tic-tac mints inside. I don't have a photo of those and I did not keep mine. 1989, was even busier. We had our first daughter in December, just 9 days before Christmas. Jane and I collaborated on these grapevine wreaths. Each cross stitch design was unique.
1989 Grapevine Wreath |
I found kits for these cute penquins that were very similar to the snowmen from 1983. They had red or green caps and scarves. I decided 1990 would be the last year since I had a 1 year old and was expecting our second daughter. My sisters volunteered to help so we began planning the ornaments together and dividing the work.
1990 Knitted Penquins |
1991 Cross Stitch Gift Bags |
1992 Quilt Square Pillow |
1993 Jigsaw Puzzle Piece Wreath |
1994 Victorian Buildings |
1995 Wooden Stocking Cutouts |
1996 Cutwork |
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Wehrheim Family Ornaments - 1977 thru 1986
The tradition of our family ornaments began in 1977 when my sister, Jane, bought a pair of socks for each person who would be celebrating Christmas at my parents' home on Christmas Day. We had two new babies in the family (niece Trisha and nephew Phillip). They each got a small pair of socks with a squeeze toy stuffed inside. I don't remember all the socks but do remember striped toe socks for my mom and her sister, Aunt Ruth. Most of the boys got tube socks. I think everyone except the two babies got candy in their socks. We stuffed one sock inside the other then added the treat. They were hung on the mantle with thumbtacks.
It was so much fun on Christmas morning to hear my mom talking about it and trying to figure which of us had done it. Unfortunately I do not have a picture of that - not sure if Jane does.
The next year, Jane and I planned together. We got an engraved ornament for everyone. Mine was Sally from A Charlie Brown Christmas.
The 1979 treats were small wicker baskets with some candy. They were a variety of shapes and all different shades of brown. We placed them on the hearth in front of the fireplace. I don't have a photo of those either.
In 1980, Jane got married and moved to Michigan, 13 hours away, so I took over the tradition.
I decided to make felt mittens and our mom helped me by doing the stitching on the mittens for Aunt Ruth, Uncle Les (they always spent Christmas at our house) all 7 siblings, in-laws, and 6 grandchildren. A candy cane placed in each made them more festive.
In 1981, I made everyone a needlepoint box using plastic canvas and yarn. I chose a design for each person. Some were Christmas emblems like an angel or a star. Others were something that was specific for that person. I collected rainbow items so I stitched a rainbow on mine. My sister, Carol, liked butterflies. She recently gave her box to my daughter who also likes butterflies.
So, it did not begin as ornaments but just a little treat for everyone from Santa. In 1982, I stitched a miniature stocking for each person. The back of the stocking is red gingham. They were really cute! I lived in a mobile home and did not have a lot of space for a tree so I made a macrame tree that hung flat on the wall. I put lights through the opening and hung all of the miniature stockings on it. I will have to see if I can find a photo of that. There were 6 different designs in the kit I bought to make these - Angel, Train, Tree, Poinsettia, Raggedy Ann doll and Raggedy Andy doll. I had to plan ahead to get them all done by Christmas. I have often thought I should make some for those family members that have come along since 1982 - maybe some day :-)
One of my favorites were these cute little snowmen. There were six different colors for the hats and I made sure each family had a different hat for each person. The snowmen are made with 2 styrofoam balls and a knitted tube. I did a lot of the knitting on my lunch hour at work. I even made some to sell to co-workers.
Another favorite was the crocheted rings with the cross stitch insert that I made in 1984. As I recall I made each insert different using a book that had all sorts of miniature Christmas designs. I did the crochet trim in several different colors. The crochet stitches are done around a gold curtain ring. I have since misplaced the book with the pattern (I think I loaned it to someone but never got it back). I have looked for patterns like this but no luck. I think I could make up something similar if I just take the time. I would like to do something like this again. Maybe do them in green like a wreath and add some red beads, leaving the center open.
The 1985 ornaments took a lot of time. First, plastic canvas was cut into the pieces for the sleigh using a pattern from the kit I bought. Each piece was stitched and then all joined together using yarn. The pattern also had a large sleigh to use as a centerpiece. I planned to do that too but pretty much did not want to see another piece of plastic canvas or red yarn by the time I finished the sleighs. We added a couple in-laws and 4 grandkids to the family since 1981.
Another favorite was the Mary Jane (for the females) and tennis shoes (for the males) with long socks. These were filled with some sort of candy. These were the ornaments for 1986. By now, it was pretty much an ornament tradition. I only have the Mary Jane one so will have to see if I can get a photo of the tennis shoes from one of the men in the family.
I figure this post would be too long if I cover the almost 40 years of ornaments so I am breaking it up into 10 year sections. Be sure to check the following posts for more.
It was so much fun on Christmas morning to hear my mom talking about it and trying to figure which of us had done it. Unfortunately I do not have a picture of that - not sure if Jane does.
The next year, Jane and I planned together. We got an engraved ornament for everyone. Mine was Sally from A Charlie Brown Christmas.
1978 Engraved Ornaments |
In 1980, Jane got married and moved to Michigan, 13 hours away, so I took over the tradition.
1980 Felt Mittens |
In 1981, I made everyone a needlepoint box using plastic canvas and yarn. I chose a design for each person. Some were Christmas emblems like an angel or a star. Others were something that was specific for that person. I collected rainbow items so I stitched a rainbow on mine. My sister, Carol, liked butterflies. She recently gave her box to my daughter who also likes butterflies.
1981 Needlepoint Boxes |
1982 Cross Stitched Stockings |
One of my favorites were these cute little snowmen. There were six different colors for the hats and I made sure each family had a different hat for each person. The snowmen are made with 2 styrofoam balls and a knitted tube. I did a lot of the knitting on my lunch hour at work. I even made some to sell to co-workers.
1983 Knitted Snowmen |
1984 Crocheted Rings |
1985 Needlepoint Sleighs |
1986 Mary Janes and Tennis Shoes |
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