Showing posts with label Santas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santas. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Christmas Farmhouse Kitchen Tour

Our Christmas Kitchen, 
Our Christmas Kitchen

Come grab a cup of coffee and 

Our Christmas Kitchen

Whistle a Carol or two, 

Our Christmas Kitchen

Make your coffee, just the way you want.


Our Christmas Kitchen

Grab a cookie from our last Sunday Cookie Bake before I put them away.

Our Christmas Kitchen

Or a piece of poundcake,

Our Christmas Kitchen

or another cookie, 
I have them hidden in plain sight here, now.



Our Christmas Kitchen

or here, this carousel plays music, turns--and is a hidden cookie tin.

Our Christmas Kitchen

I'll just put away the cookie cutter bins, LOL. Yes, it is that bad here. 

Our Christmas Kitchen

Phew, now grab a chair and let's take a break.

Our Christmas Kitchen

Around the kitchen, I add Christmas to what I have here everyday.
Everything is vintage at this point.

Our Christmas Kitchen

I've added vintage tins, everywhere.

Our Christmas Kitchen

Elves living in my ivy.


Our Christmas Kitchen

Elves everywhere

Our Christmas Kitchen

In the tree

Our Christmas Kitchen

everywhere.

Our Christmas Kitchen

I decorated the windows with round molds and cake pans.

Our Christmas Kitchen


And streamers of cookie cutters.

Our Christmas Kitchen

On the island, Grandma was in charge of baking all those cookies with 10 elves helping on Sunday.
We managed to get them all done and iced and another 6 dozen or so gingerbread baked before the snow hit.

Our Christmas Kitchen

A Sinterklaus, watches from the buffet.



Our Christmas Kitchen

Another elf in the gravy boat.


Our Christmas Kitchen

A couple of adorable furred elves, on the pantry doors.


Our Christmas Kitchen

A vintage Danish Bell hanger is on the new wallpaper. Nisseman or Danish Elves are busy doing their work and play.

Our Christmas Kitchen

I think this is from the early 1970s.



Our Christmas Kitchen

Since I now have a red, white and blue kitchen, even the S&P are decor.


Our Christmas Kitchen

I have an old wool santa next to the tree. 



A nutcracker stands guard at the herb planters which I stuffed with snow and snowflakes

Our Christmas Kitchen

which I stuffed with snow and snowflakes

Our Christmas Kitchen

Gingerbread boxes are safe for little hands to handle. Vintage cookie cutters are here and there
in case Grandma cracks the whip and we have to bake some more.



Our Christmas Kitchenb

Well, how about another cup of coffee. 

Our Christmas Kitchen

Another piece of poundcake?


Our Christmas Kitchen



And a Very Merry Christmas and 
Happy Holidays 
to All!

Thanks always for visiting. 
I will try and respond to every comment and answer every question.

All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions or posts. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

I will be sharing at these fine Parties!






Friday, December 11, 2015

Vintage Christmas Kitchen Deux


Welkommen og Gladelig Jule, or Welcome and Merry Christmas from our small house. We live everyday with generations of family antiques and personal finds. 

Everything in this post is OLD NEW GREEN REDO,  and loved.


 One of the advantages of being old, is everything I own is vintage, LOL. The Cookie tin is a recent find from a thrift store and filled with pumpkin cookies. The coffee pot is Danish and my grandmother's it's a drip coffeepot with a little white cloth bag to hold the grounds.


Have a cup of coffee from my Wachtersbach cups...I have no idea--20years old maybe. I have some white ones that are from the 1970's. I loved the wine snowman---he just fit in here---late in the afternoon we can share a sip of wine.


Center of the table right now is the fish poacher filled with my jello and tart tins, with some vintage napkins I found a few weeks ago, in this post Vintage and Holiday Finds. 
Christmas pig is still fattening up on his trough of acorns. 
Will he or won't he find himself 'on' the Christmas table this year?
The tablecloths are all cotton and vintage--the blue faded topper is from Denmark from 1969-70.
 I use it every year as our everyday tablecloth during the holidays.

 Here is the dining room area from the counter side of the kitchen. The blue plates are Bing&Grondahol and Royal Copenhagen Christmas plates that are up all year long. 
My oldest is 1914 and inheirited from my great-grandparents.
I use holly and mini lights across the top of the room, 
and it pretty much stays up through the winter months.


 The corner hutch I snagged about 25 years ago at a thrift store, it had been in a fire...
but the the glass was intact. Hubby scrapped and sanded it down to bare and we painted it. Underneath is great storage for big platters and bowls.


My windows have vintage jello molds, and a spongecake springmold 
used as wreaths with a sprig of ivy in them.


 Peppermint striped ribbon is added to my normal blue and white for Christmas color. 
The television is Vintage too, lol.


The spinning wheel lamp was my grandmother's summer cottage.  I have Vintage Santas in a variety of materials: a pressed wool German Belsnikle, resin Santa's from around the world-from Carson Pirie Scott years ago. My small wool Danish elves (Tomte or Julenisse) are very small and mischevious and will show up in the strangest places closer to Christmas.
 Part of the magic of the season.


The bottom of the cabinet: these wonderful candlesticks handpainted by an artisan from the 80's and some porcelain Santa's from around the world, I have had forever.



A closeup of the other Santa candlestick  
shares the stage with the Laplander Santa and reindeer from Carson's. 
An old milk pail filled with handmade antique and vintage wooden spoons from the family. 
More bits of Ivy for green. The plate behind is the last plate
 I have from my first set of dishes, 1968, Johnson Bros...I forget the pattern name.


 My Cookie tin tree from this post, Vintage Christmas Kitchen  
and all the vintage baking goodies spread around.


Center of the kitchen dining room is the island with a small Christmas tree. 
The white chair is Ikea and a cutdown bar height chair used for the Grand at the dining table. Hopefully after the new year, all the cabinets, floor, ceiling will be replaced. 

The needlework hearts are traditional Danish after the paper heart pockets called, Julehjerter.
 Great tutorial here, Danish Woven Paper Hearts.
My great aunt, Gudren made these when in her 90's, along with the small baskets you see on the tree. 
The gingerbread guy is my hubby's with his Christmas-'Honey Do List'.


I used a spring-form cakepan for the base of the tree.
My three year old grandaughter chose the ornaments and where to place them. 
She put them on and I spun the tree around to get some sort of balance. 
I didn't change any, well maybe one or two...but, she is a born decorator. 


Cookies, hearts, mushrooms, red enamelware, and Scandinavian wooden ornaments
 or special ones made by crafters. Nothing is NEW on here now...everything is vintage at this point.



Cookie tin is from IKEA a few years back...
crock was a gift says, "Executive Grandma's snack jar for VIP grandchildren," 
which I love and gets plenty of use.


Covering the end of the island and the electrical works of the tree, 
is a cross-stitch Santa on heavy cotton probably a 12-count cloth. 
As another great-aunt in Denmark became older she worked larger because of her failing sight,
 and this was a treasure she sent to me in the 1980's. 
Tante Dagne would have been in her mid-90's then.


Granddaughter's white chair is covered with a child's (mine) 1950's Danish homespun apron. 
The colors and cloth just echo all the colors in our ktchen. 
so Tak!-Thank-you for stopping by, and don't forget to have a cookie or two, 
it's Christmas afterall!

All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own or I am in possesion of the originals, 
I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or products used. 
Please do not use my photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. 
Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle 
 As always I appreciate your comments and questions, 

Sandi