Best Christmas cookies? An email from Taste of Home had me clicking on the link, even if our Christmas gathering this year happened a fortnight ago. I have a Pavlov-inspired response to cookies.
Surprisingly, when I clicked it open, nothing inspired me to hit the "print" button and further clutter my kitchen counter with maybe-I'll-try-this-later printouts. My kids should be proud of me for not falling back into the behavior that required multiple trips to the burn pit and Goodwill during a Covid cleaning frenzy.
Anyway ... then I saw another link on the bottom of the email: Vintage Christmas Pictures Through the Years:What Christmas Looked Like the Year You Were Born. (Click on the link to see 60 years worth of photos.)
Since I've been on my share of photo Christmas cards through the years, I couldn't resist.
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1956 - From Vintage Christmas Photos (link above)
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Even though it was a year early, I thought 1956 - with the rocking horse - looked more like my birthday year than my actual birth year. Well, maybe not quite. Our red rocking horse was wooden and bright red.
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Lisa & me - Cowgirls |
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I wasn't the only one who rode miles on that horse. I evidently turned the reins over to my sister, Lisa, on occasion.
My actual birth year - 1957 - had this photo, a tree dripping with tinsel. Yes, there's a real tree underneath all that silver.
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1957 - From Vintage Christmas Photos (link above) |
But then I remembered putting tinsel on our trees at home. We were supposed to put the tinsel on, strand by stand. And when it was time to pack away the Christmas decorations for another year, we were to painstakingly remove the tinsel from the tree so it could be used the following year, too. I can't say that I'm sorry that tinsel is no longer the Gold Standard of Christmas trees.
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1958 - My Aunt Merlene holding Lisa, Grandpa Neelly holding me, Grandma Neelly and my mom. (My dad must have been behind the camera.) | |
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1961 - me & Lisa and the tinseled tree
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1963 - Lisa, Darci, Kim |
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I seem to remember more tinsel on our trees than these photos reveal. (It was probably all the individual placement that tricked my mind into believing the tree was covered with tinsel.)
I've been involved in Christmas photo cards for most of my life. It's a
family tradition. I starred in my very first one in 1957, as a
6-month-old baby.
By the time 1958 rolled around, I was already sharing space with my sister, Lisa, on the annual missive from Bob and Janis.
Though my brother, Kent, was born in December 1966, he didn't make the
Christmas card until 1967. This is the first photo card with all my
siblings. I would have been 10, Lisa, 9, Darci, 6 and Kent was 1.
My parents included their children on the family Christmas card until we
graduated from college. Since then, we make occasional appearances with
a full-family photo, but most of the time these days, the great-grandchildren are the stars in my parents' annual letter. And this year, with Covid, my parents celebrated a little family history of another kind - a retrospective on John Deere tractors' evolution during their years of farming.
Randy and I sent our first photo card in 1981, the year we were married.
We didn't send another photo card until 1985, the year that Jill was
born. It was only natural, I suppose, that we continued the tradition
with our
own children.
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Christmas Card Photo - Jill - 1985 |
We sent one with the three of us in 1986, when Jill was 15 months old.
After that, I usually stayed on the other side of the camera and just
included the kids. (When you're the one doing the work, you get the most
votes.)
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Christmas Card Photo - 1986 |
The first one with Brent was in 1988. Brent would have been about 7 months and Jill was 3.
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Christmas Card Photo - 1988 |
Back when Jill and Brent were little, this annual attempt
was captured on film. And you weren't sure what you'd gotten until the
film was developed. I have rolls and rolls of film chronicling the
misadventures of getting two little kids to look their best in the same
frame.
Here's another of our many attempts in 1988:
The move to digital photography makes the storage problem easier -
though it can't help everyone look great in every frame.
This year, we let a professional handle the front photo. (Thanks to Demiurge Photography, Manhattan, KS).
For the back of the card, Kinley's and Brooke's visits to the farm made
the cut. The one with the calf was taken in February - pre-Covid. It
seems so long ago. The other was taken during 2020 wheat harvest.
I know that Christmas card letters have their share of detractors. But, I
love getting cards and letters from people at this time of year. Even
in this electronic communication age, I send quite a few Christmas
cards. It's been a way for me to keep in touch of childhood friends and
college buddies, along with sending greetings to family members across
the U.S. and seasoning's greetings to neighbors. It seems we've gotten a lot fewer this year.
Today is my mom's birthday. We usually have a birthday/Christmas Eve celebration at my folks. In fact, in my 63 years, I've never done anything different on Christmas Eve.
But there are 32 of us now. We've outgrown the dining room table and expanded into a farm shed. But even then, it's probably not wise to mix multiple households together during a pandemic.
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December 24, 2019
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You know, all the kids are having Zoom birthday parties this year. And, now, so is my Mom. Thanks to my brother for getting it set up.
No matter how you're celebrating this year, we wish you a Merry Christmas ... and a better New Year!
Peace on earth, good will toward all.