I neglected, last post, to display another gift we gave out on our wedding day. Around the beginning of our wedding week, our DJ talked to us about doing an "anniversary dance," where all the married couples would get out on the floor, dance, and leave it as their anniversary year was called. The tradition for this was the newly-married couple would give the "winners" a gift. He suggested a bottle of champagne or sparkling cider, but noooo, I couldn't just do that. "Congrats on being married for longer than most marriages in the world. Here's a fizzy beverage." It just seemed too minimal. Not that I'm against minimalism - I'm usually all about simple, but when it comes to gifting, I generally like to put a lot of thought and soul into it, even if I have only a little idea of who is getting the gift.
So, I thought about who might get it. I had family coming out from the midwest, but only 2 were couples and one was younger. I had family coming from NJ, but I wasn't sure how long they had been married. Finally, I decided after wandering The Christmas Tree Shop for a bit, to create a New England-themed gift basket. Even if a couple from closer to home got it, I was sure it would be appreciated.
As soon as I walked into Christmas Tree Shop, I spent what seemed like 30-40 minutes in their small nautical/beach section. I snagged a medium-sized "lobster trap" for the basket and drooled over some home decor I decided against, until we put the stuff up we already have! I had already gotten a bottle of sparkling cider, so I grabbed a couple $1 flutes, deciding I would maybe put a design on them later. This is what I came up with:
I looked up nautical love quotes to write on them and found this one and this one to be the best and the cutest. Topped them off with the wedding date on the back and, making them more like trophies, wrote "Most Experienced" on the bottoms.
When I got to the food section, I really went all out with anything "New England-y." Saltwater taffy, cranberry preserves, and lobster bisque. I almost got canned clams, but the can said they were shipped from southeast Asia...at least the lobster bisque was American, but you can't expect to get the best of the best at Christmas Tree Shop, haha. I added some of these fun woven balls from Kohl's, to make sure the glass objects didn't move around too much, and a book I also found at Kohl's called "Old Age Ain't No Place For Sissies," and found that the lobster trap had to be wired shut, even though it had a magnetic clasp, just in case.
While not all married couples got on the floor, we had a good number of participants and the longest married were my husband's aunt and uncle, at 38 years!
When we got home the next day after the wedding, I decided to act on this pinspiration and take some of the petals from my bouquet and put them in glass ornament globes. The pin says to dry them first, but I was afraid they would crack and break trying to get them in the hole at the top. Unfortunately, I learned the hard way that not drying them first is worse.
The night before we left on our honeymoon |
The day we returned from our honeymoon, 5 days later |
before drying |
after drying |
before drying |
after drying |
before drying |
this one is still drying... |
On the other hand, the dried petals from the head table flowers turned out nicely!
close-up of a portion of the head table flowers |
So, I got some decent ornaments from the wedding day flowers - not from my bouquet, but that's okay. I also stripped up a program from the day and put that in a globe!
Then, I put sand we collected from the beaches during our honeymoon (after drying it) into 3 more globes.
Summerside PEI |
Tignish PEI |
Cavendish PEI |
So, we should be all set for ornaments for a while, with the anchors from our wedding, too, haha.
Hopefully, by my next post, I will have experimented with more crafty things to show off. :)
Thanks for reading!