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#Metal wall hanging
dwuerch-blog · 4 days
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Created for Moments Like This
I saw this metal wall hanging in a store. I took a photo of it. It spoke to me because I remember the birth of my children. I knew I was created to bring them into this world. It spoke to me because there have been times when I encouraged someone to carry on and not give up. Maybe I was the one that helped save their life. Maybe we gently and intentionally encourage others toward a relationship…
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ornamentalclassics · 1 year
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Deck the Lawn: Festive Christmas Decorations for Your Outdoor Space
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The holiday season is a magical time of year when homes and gardens sparkle with festive decor. While much of the focus is often on decorating indoors, your outdoor space also presents ample opportunities to spread some seasonal cheer. With a little creativity, you can transform your lawn, garden, and outdoor areas into a winter wonderland. 
From lighting displays to Christmas-themed ornamentation, let's explore some fun and unique ways to deck your outdoor halls this Christmas.
Light Up the Lawn
One of the most popular and impactful ways to decorate your yard for Christmas is with lights. Twinkling white lights instantly create a magical ambiance, whether wrapped around trees, shrubs, railings, or wound through planting beds. For an extra festive flair, opt for strands with colored bulbs. 
Icicle lights offer a frosty and sparkling effect when draped over eaves and fences. Light up pathways and driveways by lining them with mini-lights or luminaries. You can also use spotlights or floodlights to illuminate focal points and landscaping features. 
For next-level holiday light displays, many homeowners turn to LED projection systems. These lights can cast shapes, images, and animations onto the surfaces of your home. Kids and adults alike will love the dazzling shows.
Natural Decorations
Bring the natural beauty of winter into your outdoor Christmas decor. One simple idea is to incorporate seasonal plants and greenery like holly, pine, evergreen boughs, and poinsettias. Display them in pots on your patio, steps, or walkways. Hang wreaths made of fresh greens on doors and entryways. 
Pine cones are another great natural decorative element. Gather them up and pile them in bowls or baskets, or use them to create simple garlands and swags. For some shimmer, spray paint them in metallic hues like gold, silver, or copper.
Berries and botanicals like winterberries, hydrangeas, curly willow branches, and bare birch logs also make gorgeous wintry decorations. Display them in vases, planters, and baskets, or incorporate them into centerpieces and wreaths.
Fun & Festive Ornaments 
When it comes to decking the halls outdoors, let your imagination run wild with fun and playful Christmas ornaments and decorations. 
Giant ornament decorations make a bold statement. Place giant clear glass ball replicas in your yard or flowerbeds. Hang supersized metallic ornaments from tree branches. Adorn your entryway with oversized wreaths, bows, candy canes, and presents.
For a touch of whimsy, accent with character decorations like glowing snowmen, Santa and reindeer figures, oversized candy decorations, and Christmas mythical creatures like gnomes and elves. Use stakes to display them on your lawn or flowerbeds.
Other creative Christmas ornament ideas include decorative buoys, lighted wireframes in fun shapes like trees, stars, and gift boxes, and items that move like pinwheels, spinners, or whirlygigs. Just be sure whichever ornaments you choose can withstand the elements.  
Winter planters and pots are another area to have some fun. Fill them with faux snow and glittery pine cones, birch logs, or mini-lighted trees. For a unique display, mount wire baskets on exterior walls and fill them with colorful glass ornaments.
Themed Decorations
Transport guests to iconic Christmas scenes and movies with some themed decorations. For a North Pole effect, use wireframes to make candy cane arches over walkways and line the yard with snow-dusted faux pine trees. 
Recreate the Griswold house from “National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation” with strands of quirky twinkling lights. Build a decorative neighborhood model like the hilarious scenes from “Christmas Vacation” and “Elf.” 
Make your own larger-than-life Christmas gnomes and Santas like the “Elf” movie. Construct giant storybook scenes of the Grinch and Whoville or Santa’s workshop at the North Pole. With a dose of creativity, the possibilities are endless!
Interactive Outdoor Fun
Incorporate opportunities for guests to interact and enjoy activities outdoors. Set up stations for making s'mores by open fire pits or chimineas. Build a snowman-making area with props like decorative top hats, scarves, and carrot noses. 
Host an outdoor holiday movie night in the yard or project it against the house. For parties, decorate with festive backyard games like cornhole, giant Jenga, and Yahtzee, or set up a hot cocoa bar cart. 
Let kids enjoy a winter wonderland with a Santa’s Workshop playhouse or snow-covered playground area filled with sleds, bouncy houses, and faux snowball targets. Line the space with festoon lighting to make it extra special. The more opportunities for holiday engagement, the merrier!
Festive Accents & Touches
Tie your entire outdoor Christmas decor scheme together with some well-placed festive accents and finishing touches. Wrap trees, railings, columns, and light posts with tinsel garland or ribbon. Scatter glittery pinecones to add some sparkle. Display vintage-style blow molds, like Santa riding a snowmobile. 
Place decorative mats at entrances, top balconies, and railings with frosted garland and bows, and adorn planter boxes with sprigs of holly and berry stems. Christmas flags and oversize stockings hung on exterior walls also help spread the holiday cheer all around your home.
With a dose of creativity and merrymaking spirit, you can deck even the smallest yard, balcony, or patio with Christmas magic. Just be sure to use durable materials made to withstand the elements. Then get ready to embrace the joys of the season as you take your celebrations outdoors!
Outdoor Christmas Decoration Ideas
When decking your outdoor space for the holidays, the possibilities are endless. Here are some additional ideas to spark your creativity:
Lighted trees, deer, Santas, candy canes, and arches in the yard
Projection lights displaying images on the home exterior 
Inflatable Christmas decorations like Santa, snowmen, nativity scene
Outdoor holiday village displays and mini Christmas trees
Lighted wire or metal silhouettes of trees, stars, reindeer, Christmas characters
Evergreen garlands, wreaths, Christmas trees on porch, balcony, patio
Outdoor holiday floral decor like poinsettias, amaryllis, cyclamen, Christmas cactus
Mason jar luminaries lining the driveway, sidewalks, steps 
Faux snow-dusted branches, pinecones, and berries
Outdoor holiday banners, bows, garlands on mailboxes, fencing, planters
Window candle luminaries
Lit shapes on exterior walls like stars, trees, wreaths 
Candy cane stakes
Holiday bows tied around trees in the yard
Christmas lights outlining roofline, windows, door frames, sidewalks, etc. 
Decorated yard signs with holiday greetings, giant candy canes
Outdoor holiday rug at entryways
Front door decorated with evergreen wreath, bells, bows, pine cone garland
Decorated planter boxes and pots - snowy pine cones, branches, mini trees
Wrap tree trunks or columns in ribbon, lights
Lamp posts decorated with garlands, bows, lights
Lit wire ornament shapes hung in trees - stars, snowflakes, icicles, etc.
Outdoor holiday scenes & characters - Santa sleigh, reindeer, nativity scene  
Supersized holiday decorations - ornaments, candy canes, stockings, bows, bells, lights
Wrap railings, banisters, deck posts in garlands, string lights  
Lit wire deer, snowmen, and candy canes along the roofline
Christmas trees, evergreen shapes (stars, trees), wreaths in windows
Outdoor holiday centerpieces with winter botanicals, pine cones, evergreen, berries
Display vintage blow molds outdoors - Santa, snowmen, nutcrackers, etc.
Outdoor holiday games - giant Yahtzee, oversized Connect Four, cornhole
Garden Decorations for Christmas
The garden presents plenty of opportunities to add Christmas magic. Here are ideas for decorating your garden and landscaped areas:
Evergreen wreaths, mini trees, or shrub Christmas trees
Wrap trees or posts with string lights  
Use stakes & fasteners to display ornament decor in flowerbeds
Hang oversized ornaments, and wireframes from tree branches
Drape lighting on bushes, over arbors/pergolas
Adorn pots/planters with pine sprigs, ornaments, berry branches  
Incorporate winter plants - holly, pines, poinsettias
Accent with red winterberries, cut curly willow stems 
Display glass ball replicas, mirror balls in beds, containers
Scatter-glittered pinecones as accents in flowerbeds
Use solar-powered spotlights to illuminate trees, ornaments, lighting
Wrap tree trunks in ribbon, string lights
Place lighted wire trees, stars, and deer among the garden beds  
Create holiday displays - Santa sleigh, reindeer, snowmen
Use stakes to display candy canes along garden pathways
Drape net lights over bushes
Set up lighted arches over pathways lined with white lights  
Hang giant glass ball ornaments from tree branches
Accent with sprigs of holly, evergreen, pops of red bows/berries
Display yard art - lighted wire snowflakes, stars, trees
Wrap columns, railings, and fence posts in ribbon & lights
Have fun dressing up your garden for a magical Christmas! The possibilities are limited only by your imagination.
Best Materials for Outdoor Christmas Decorations
When selecting decorations to place outdoors, be sure to choose materials made to withstand the winter elements:
Waterproof Christmas lights - LED lights last longest. Choose lights rated for outdoor use.
Weather-resistant garland, ribbon, and wreaths made of plastic, silk, or rust-proof metals that won’t deteriorate or fade.
Ornaments and decor items specified for outdoor use are made from durable plastics, resin, metals, or shatterproof materials. Avoid glass.
Plants and greenery suitable for winter like pines, holly, boxwood, cedar, etc. Display poinsettias outdoors only temporarily, not overnight.
Weatherproof decorative objects like resin or plastic Santas, reindeer, nutcrackers, snowmen, etc. 
Inflatable decorations with waterproof, UV-protected surfaces designed for outdoor use
Polyresin, PVC, reinforced concrete, or fiberglass yard art pieces that won’t crack or warp 
Lighted wire frame decorations made with waterproof, UV-protected plastic coverings
Solar-powered lights, spotlights, luminaries that won’t risk shorts in rain or snow
Outdoor-rated extension cords, timers, and hanging/mounting hardware
Choose decor specifically made for the outdoors. Read tags and descriptions carefully to ensure durability. With proper materials, you can enjoy your festive display all season long without weathering.
Outdoor Christmas Decoration Safety Tips
When decorating outdoors, keep these safety precautions in mind:
Use a GFCI outlet when plugging in electrical decorations outside to prevent shocks.
Check for exposed, frayed, or loose wires and damaged cords. Discard any defects.
Do not overload outlets. Use appropriate gauge extension cords.
Use timers certified for outdoor use to automatically turn lights on and off.
Only hang lights and decorations using clips, fasteners, or hooks suitable for outdoors.
Do not staple or nail into power cords or lighting strings.
Position all cords and lights away from water sources and walkways.
Turn off all lights when away from home or when asleep. 
For roof and gutter decor, use proper ladders and safety precautions. 
Stake and secure yard decorations properly to keep them upright in wind and rain.
Use plastic hooks, zip ties, or insulated staples instead of metal when decorating outdoors.
Check that all decorations are high enough over pathways to avoid tripping hazards.
Make sure decor does not interfere with lighting or block visibility for traffic or pedestrians. 
Avoid using real candles outdoors. Opt for battery-operated candle lights instead.
Check that yard/lawn ornaments do not pose choking hazards or other dangers for pets or children.
With careful setup and common sense precautions, you can safely spread the holiday spirit outside. Follow guidelines to prevent hazards or accidents.
Christmas Lawn Decorating Ideas
The lawn offers prime real estate for spirited Christmas displays. Here are creative ideas for decorating your yard:
Blanket lawn in white with faux snow dust for a winter wonderland effect. Use temporary spray snow.
Use stakes to display pathway lining candy canes, arches, trees, and holiday characters. 
Create a mini North Pole with inflatable igloos, snowmen, polar bears, penguins, and Santa’s workshop.
Build snowman-making stations with props - top hats, scarves, corncob pipes, nose accessories. 
Use spotlights or projections to cast holiday shapes and scenes onto exterior walls or garage doors.
Line the driveway or sidewalk with luminaries or votive candle lanterns.
Decorate yard art - wire deer, trees, snowmen, stars, and arches with lights.
Use decorative ground stakes or yard greeters - Merry Christmas signs, giant candy canes.
Wrap tree trunks with string lights. Drape net lighting on bushes. Outline rooflines.
Set up family fun zones - holiday movie screening, caroling stage, snowball target practice. 
Create a mini holiday village with small lighted houses and Christmas trees. 
Display larger-than-life Santa, a sleigh with reindeer, nutcrackers, nativity scene.
Project patterns like stars, snowflakes, and holiday characters onto exterior walls.
Have fun transforming your yard into a magical Christmas extravaganza this season!
Outdoor Christmas Decor on a Budget
You can deck your halls with festive cheer without breaking the bank using these budget outdoor decor ideas:
Make your own greenery garlands and wreaths by clipping your yard or fresh-cut greens. Accent with ribbon, pinecones, and berries from nature.
Use what you already have - balls, vases, garden statues - and give items a holiday makeover by spraypainting them red, green, gold, or silver. Add ribbons.
Invest in a strand or two of sturdy, good-quality lights each year. Build up your lighting display over time.
Shop discounts and dollar stores for inexpensive themed mini trees, candy canes, Gnomes, and yard art. Repurpose your finds each year. 
DIY ornaments from painted pinecones, wood slices, acorns, popsicle sticks, and glass ball knockoffs using ping pong balls. 
Make glittery, snowy pinecones and decorative gift bows using inexpensive craft supplies from your local hobby shop. 
Search Craigslist and Facebook for used or free holiday decorations, PVC candy canes, wire deer, etc. 
Use items from nature like evergreen branches, bare birch logs, and winterberries. Collect pinecones on walks to use for DIY decor.
Make outdoor luminaries from mason jars. Use tea lights or battery-operated candles instead of real candles. 
Use your creativity instead of your wallet! You can make memorable decorations without spending a great deal.
Garden Accents for Christmas from Ornamental Classics
For holiday home garden decorating, explore Ornamental Classics' beautiful selection of decorative accents to add seasonal charm.
Made of durable materials suitable for the outdoors, these exquisite pieces make charming additions to garden beds, walkways, patios, and entryways. Choose from styles like:
Sparkling Mercury Glass Mushrooms - Cluster their elegant silvery stems sprouting “snowcapped” tops for a magical wintry effect.
North Pole People - Welcome a festive family of hand-painted resin carolers. Pose and place them singing joyfully in your garden.  
Dancing Deer Metal Art - Handmade steel deer silhouettes bring woodland whimsy dancing along a snowy trail of sparkling white lights.
Copper Birch Tree Metal Trees - Drape these coppery birch trees with string lights for a gorgeous glittering garden accent.
Glass Icicles - Suspend these shimmering icicle drops from branches for a glistening wintry sparkle.
Copper Star Tree Toppers - Perch these rustic burnished stars atop mini potted evergreens. 
Let your creativity shine this Christmas with Ornamental Classics' exquisite garden decor. Add glitter, glow, and seasonal magic to your outdoor spaces.
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the-skys-gone-out · 2 years
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adventuresofsnake · 11 months
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Dude, I don't mean to be a buzzkill, but you have two old timey ships at home already. I think if I buy a third I have to be registered on some kinda list.
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age-of-shadows · 11 months
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timeline poster-posting
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duskspring · 11 months
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Where the FUCK does one buy magazines nowadays because I better get my hands on the Ghost Metal Hammer one
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random2908 · 1 year
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I started by telling myself I shouldn't feel bad that I didn't get all my planned chores done: Saturday is a rest day, and we've just finished three weeks of crunch at work. (Next week might also be crunch but probably not; the product ships at the end of the week but we should be in good enough shape already.)
But then I realized: I ran three errands in the morning, and did three chores in the evening--even if one of the chores was just "cook a healthy dinner" and two of the chores were banking-related on a website. (But one involved sending text messages, and one involved an actual phone call to customer service, so I can't even really say they were just on a website.) That's six things I got done on a rest day. I may have overscheduled by saying I'd do at least eight things, but still, six things is very good.
#the things I did NOT do all involve a hand drill so#I have about average upper body strength for a woman which means I do struggle somewhat with hand drills#although these chores all involve walls not metal so it's not THAT bad--except it's sideways rather than down so I can't lean into it#so yeah that's a level of chores I was not up to on my rest day#tomorrow is too booked up for chores--I told my friend I wanted to hang out with them this weekend#since I said no two weeks ago (I was fully booked) and they had to cancel on me last weekend#and normally we meet in the middle for hiking (we live 1.5 hours apart) but this time they suggested I drive all the way out#and I said yes before I realized that's what they were suggesting#so that's fine--but I can't do anything else beyond that tomorrow even just basic chores#which is a little bit getting to me because a house guest is coming to visit in four days#and I really need the shower curtain to be properly secured to the wall by then?#anything else is gravy--I already have clean sheets for her and everything--but THAT needs to be done#I've been living here almost two months and have only knocked the shower curtain down about three times so it's really not that bad#I even hang my towels on it and it's fine BUT I know how to do it? and I'm like professionally good at manipulating physical objects lol#like being a mechanic of sorts is literally a significant chunk of my job#whereas she doesn't pick up object-manipulation tasks easily--especially not involving gross motor skills#in fact when I mentioned it to her she was like yeah that was something she was not going to be able to handle#if I didn't have it properly installed by the time she arrived#so uh... well not today or tomorrow#and Monday and Tuesday I have work... and she's arriving Wednesday#ok realistically tomorrow night I'm just going to have to suck it up and get to drilling no matter how tired I am from driving and hiking
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omg omg I love my organization cubes. I need more of them and also a hamper
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love starsky's bachelor flat. wait are those working traffic lights?
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My sword class has relocated to what I can only describe as an unused Twin Peaks set
I want desperately to post photos but I also don’t want to dox myself
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ornamentalclassics · 2 years
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ROBIN BIRD FEEDER HANGER
Check out our robin bird feeder selection for the best in unique or custom,  handmade items from our Ornamental Classics shops.
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fingertipsmp3 · 2 years
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That ‘is this UK uni accommodation or a Swedish prison’ game is so funny but also so depressing
#literally it’s bringing back flashbacks of my final year of undergrad when i realised i was going to have to live on campus#or close to campus because i’d forgotten how to drive because i’d been in america for a year sans car#but then i missed the deadlines for good acommodation (because america) so i went for the cheapest option that was still available to me#which was a room in a building that ended up being CONDEMNED at the end of that academic year#guys it was so bad. there was racist graffiti all over the walls because no one had any respect for the place#broken glass in the courtyard. no lounge; you had to sit on the metal stairs to hang out#the stairwells just had brick walls. the kitchens were built to be shared by 6 persons maximum but forced to house 9 so they were so cramped#it was unbelieveable. i started eating at weird times so i wouldn’t have to awkwardly stare at someone while waiting for a counter/stovetop#to be free. on top of this there were wasp and silverfish infestations; my window was so drafty that hailstones came in once#the mattresses were full of fiberglass and felt like they were made up entirely of springs; and there were ground-in vomit and piss stains#on my chair and floor#and i paid ~£90.50 per week~ for this#the only thing that kept me sane was the free bus pass. i never missed a class and i went to campus every single day#and attended tons of random events and guest lectures just to not be in my room. i’d be the only person in the library at 8am on a sunday#my flatmates were a bunch of insane first years who drank and screamed at all hours so that didn’t help either. i didn’t make any friends#it was just so bad. there were never any community events taking place either and i saw the RAs exactly once. they were completely useless#reception nearly lost the kindle i ordered. i thought about doing laundry once and saw that the laundry room was absolute unmitigated chaos#so i was like ‘fuck it i’ll just wait until i’m home next weekend’ and i went into town to buy clothes to tide me over#it was just such a horrible experience. and i hate that it’s a universal one#uk universities are really like ‘give us £9k in tuition fees and also pay an arm and a leg for your accommodation.#no we will not be improving our accommodation’ it makes me fucking crazy. like where is my money GOING#you find out they spent millions refurbishing a building that didn’t need to be refurbished and you’re like. you could’ve replaced#the carpet in my room for maybe a couple of hundred quid considering how small the room is#pisses me off. my advice to undergrads is visit potential halls of residence and read reviews of them#and don’t just let them dazzle you with the tour where they only show you the good rooms - poke around. see if there’s damp or wasps#look for stains. etc. or better yet; find a half decent landlord and rent a room in a house#i had a way better time during my master’s and it was because i talked to landlords and visited their houses and brought my nosy mum#and i picked a landlord who only housed postgrads; mature students & professionals. you couldn’t pay me to live in halls again#personal#rant
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sol-air · 25 days
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You ever pick up a hobby or a craft, so you start looking for stuff in communities hoping to find someone whose selling items for that craft so that it’s less expensive, only to find a bunch of ads of people who have ripped apart those items to use as decor, and you have to fight yourself from cringing and remind yourself that there are probably hundreds of this item out there so it’s okay that people are using it this way. Cause yeah
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prettypractical · 1 month
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Top Tips for Choosing the Right Homewares for Your Space
Selecting the perfect homewares can transform your space. Consider your color scheme, room size, and overall style to ensure harmony. Opt for functional yet stylish pieces that reflect your personality. Don't forget to balance aesthetics with practicality for a comfortable, beautiful home. Visit Pretty and Practical for more tips!
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double-oy-7 · 1 month
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fun thing about today. built a bookshelf, is good. put a metal crab on the outside of my door.
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goldwallartcom · 3 months
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