Decor – Framing Small Items

Scattered around our home, there are many small and unusual framed items.  Some of these items are a collection of collectible items or cameos or historic royal medals.  These add personality and interest to our home decorations and are displayed throughout the house.

In my home office, I have recently added two wonderful collectible pieces by Margaret Furlong.  She is an artist located in Oregon that designs beautiful decorative pieces inspired by nature made in bisque porcelain.  The two pieces from her collection currently on the bookshelves in my home office are the “Heaven and Earth” and the “Hope for a New Millennium” which were purchased several years ago and originally were displayed in my daughter’s nursery in our California home.  To create these two framed collectible pieces, I purchased inexpensive gold frames that perfectly fit the Margaret Furlong pieces and two lovely pale green “velvet” scrapbook papers from the local craft store.  I removed the glass and backing from the frames then cut the “velvet” paper to fit the frame using the glass as a template.  I attached the collectible onto the paper with hot glue; carefully making sure that it would be perfectly centered within the frame, and then hot glued the paper with the collectible attached to the frame’s glass for additional support.  Finally, I placed everything back into the gold frame and it was ready to hang on the wall.  This easy craft project took 30 minutes to frame both pieces.  These two framed collectibles are a wonderful example of how to display small items in a beautiful way.

Framed collectible 2     Framed collectible 1

Displayed in my home office is a shadow box that displays commemorative medals of the British Kings and Queens.  As mentioned in this month’s Celebration post, Victoria’s Day, I am fascinated by the British Royal family.  My interest was sparked several years ago when I read a novel about Queen Victoria.  Since that time I have read numerous books about the royal family and while visiting England several years ago I had an opportunity to see the castles and country homes of the royal family which I had been reading about in their biographies.  This inspired a collection of commemorative medals of the British Kings and Queen.  The first one dates back to Queen Victoria and commemorates the Diamond Jubilee and her 60 year reign as Queen of England.  Additional commemorate medals include the coronations of the Kings and Queen that followed, King Edward VII, King George V, King Edward VIII, King George VI and finally the current Queen Elizabeth II.  One very unique pin marks the year 1937 when England had three kings.  During that one year England had three different kings, they were King George V who had recently died at the beginning of 1937, King Edward VII who abdicated before his coronation and then King George VI who was crowned at the end of 1937 and he is the father of the current Queen Elizabeth.  This particular pin is my favorite one in the collection.  All of these seven commemorative pins are in a walnut shadowbox and are wonderful way to display the collection in my home office.

Framed collectible 3   Framed collectible 4

Several years ago while shopping on ebay, I came across a great source for cameos.  I purchased several not knowing exactly what I was going to use them for, originally I was thinking of using them for a jewelry project.  Instead, I decided to frame a lovely blue cameo the same way I framed the Margaret Furlong pieces.  I purchased a small silver frame from the local craft store, dark grey “velvet” scrapbook paper and used the same process, it worked out beautifully.  The framed cameo now sits on the side table in our master bedroom and is a lovely decorative accent.

Down in our basement there is a bookshelf which is filled with family memorabilia (in the future I should write a post regarding the bookshelf and how everything is displayed!)  Anyway, there is a very special piece that commemorates our daughter’s baptism and the story behind this piece is very interesting.  First, I need to explain that both my mother’s parents emigrated from Poland through Ellis Island in the early 1900s.  Needless to say when Pope John Paul II became pope in 1978 my mother was very excited.  Several years ago when I was working on a special 80th birthday book for my mother, I wrote to the Pope hoping that he would respond and to my surprise he did write back with a lovely letter wishing her a happy birthday.  To conclude the story, when it came time for my daughter’s baptism, I again wrote to Pope John Paul II and received a letter blessing her on this special occasion and enclosed with the letter was a very special medal for her.  I copied the letter, reduced the size to fit the frame I had purchased, the original letter went into her baby book, and in the small shadowbox I included the medal the Pope sent along with a photo taken at her baptism.  This is an example of a very small item, the medal, being displayed in a wonderful way to commemorate a special and blessed event.

Framed collectible 1a

In the entertainment center down in the basement are several walnut cases specially made with a black liner and they are perfect for holding a collection of pins gathered during our road trips and overseas travels.  Almost every place visited on our travels I will purchase a pin as a souvenir and over the years I have collected hundreds.  Most of these pins are displayed in these special large walnut cases.  Check out this month’s Décor post, Travel Souvenirs, for more information regarding the other items we collect during our vacations and how they are displayed in our home.  Two small walnut cases are also displayed in the entertainment center.  One case holds a collection of Hard Rock Café guitar pins that were purchased while dining at the restaurants in several U.S. cities and other locations in Europe and Asia.  We like the food at the Hard Rock Café and if we are visiting a particular city on our travels I always check to see if there is one located there.  As mentioned in a previous post, Disney Memorabilia Collection, part of our Disneyland souvenirs is a collection of over two hundred Disney collectible pins.  Most of these pins were purchased during our visits to Disneyland or online from e-bay when I am looking for rare or discontinued pins.  A small part of the pin collection is displayed in one of the small walnut cases and the rest of the pins are stored away.  These walnut cases are an example of a terrific way to display a collection of small items and sometimes when we are down in the basement watching movies I will pull out one of the walnut cases and look at the pins and remember the places we have visited.

Pin collection 2    Pin collection 1
Pin collection 4    Pin collection 3

So, when you are purchasing small decorative items, think about displaying them in small frames that would look wonderful on bookshelves or tables in your home.  If you are a collector of small items like pins and medals, think about displaying the items together in shadowbox frames or special cases that are made specifically for this purpose.  My basic idea is that if you have purchased and collected these items take some time to display them in a decorative way to enjoy every day.  This idea is also a wonderful way to add interest and personality to a home.

Decor – Not Your Normal Wall Art!

When decorating our home, we have purchased several lovely landscapes by renowned artists but we also have many inexpensive pieces of art work hanging on our walls.  I think this balance of both types of art work keeps our home very interesting for visitors but more importantly these inexpensive and unusual wall art pieces express our family history and varied interests.

When decorating your home consider special photographs to add a personal touch.  In the hallway on the second floor of our home are several framed photographs.  These types of wall art are a very traditional alternative to formal landscape or floral paintings.  When my husband and I married, it was a second marriage for both of us so we had a small intimate wedding ceremony and catered reception at our home in California.  Before our wedding, my husband and I had a series of formal pictures taken.  We had one of these photographs framed in an ivory mat with a brass plate engraved with our names and wedding date.  Instead of a guest book, our family and friends signed the mat and it is a wonderful remembrance of that special day.  Since our wedding was so small, about 50 guests, we decided that during the wedding reception we would have the photographer take our picture with each group of guests sitting at the reception tables. Hanging next to our wedding photograph is a collection of the family group photographs in an ivory mat and golden frame.  These photographs are an important way to remember our wedding day which was celebrated with our family and friends.  Recently these photographs have taken on a very sentimental purpose since my mother, my husband’s grandparents and his young nephew have passed away over the last few years.

Hallway wedding photos    Hallway baby photo

Further down the upstairs hallway, near her room, are several photographs of our daughters taken over the years.  These photographs will change from time to time but one that always remains and my personal favorite is a photograph taken when she was just a baby.  This cute photograph shows her wearing a pair of angel wings, but the best part is the expression on her face.  Tucked into the frame is a sweet memento of her hand print taken when she was in preschool and it is the perfect finishing touch to add to the frame.

Not all art work or photographs need to hang on the walls of a home.  In our master bedroom, on our lovely dark wood dresser, are two framed wedding photographs.  These photographs rest against the dresser’s mirror and as a sweet touch I added childhood photographs of both my husband and me.  All these framed photographs are flanked by two bronze lamps with ivory lampshades decorated with amber beading.  As I mention in another Décor post this month, Floral Arrangements, on the master bedroom dresser there is a beautiful floral arrangement of green and white hydrangeas with pale pink roses in an ivory vase tied with a pale green ribbon.

Bedroom photos 1    Bedroom photos 2

In our daughter’ bedroom I used this same technique of resting framed pictures on a piece of furniture instead of hanging them on the wall.  On her dresser are framed copies of two Marty Bell paintings, the Hansel and Gretel Cottages, with ivory mats and beautiful golden frames which rest against the dresser’s mirror.  In two different ivory frames are childhood photographs of our daughter and between them is a lovely porcelain doll that bears a striking resemblance to our daughter.  There is more unusual art work in this room and hanging over the bed are two very special framed pieces.  These two pieces commemorate our daughter’s baptism and her first birthday.  In the scrapbook aisle of the local craft store I found special paper for both events, for the baptism I used a scrapbook paper designed with a sweet baptism dress and for her first birthday I used a Winnie the pooh themed scrapbook  paper.  At both of these events, guests signed the paper and wrote sweet messages to her.  Later, after the parties, my intention was to frame both for her bedroom.  I started by centering the papers onto two matching antique gold mat boards and then framed them both in matching dark wood frames.  Both of these special pieces commemorate two of the important events in our daughter’s life and add the perfect personal touch to her bedroom.

Childhood events framed

In the dining room of our home there is a mixture of both traditional and unusual art work.  On either side of our china cabinet are two Marty Bell rose paintings.  When I first hung them on the wall above the two chairs flanking the china cabinet they looked so small on the dining room’s large wall.  To add a more substantial presence to these paintings I decide to pair them with framed sheet music that I found in an antique store and with these two pieces I was hoping to add a unique personal touch to the room.  The first framed sheet music is of the song “My Kind of Town” sung by Frank Sinatra, the song is better known and often referred to as the Chicago song.  My mother was born there and my parents met, married and lived in Chicago before my family moved to California.  At weddings and special events my mom would always request her “hometown” song. The second framed sheet music is of the song “San Fernando Valley” sung by Bing Crosby.  After my parents and their growing family moved to California, they settled in San Fernando Valley.  This is where I was born and raised during the 1950s and 60s.  I have very fond memories of spending my childhood there, so this piece honors my personal history.

Dining room framed sheet music 1    Dining room framed sheet music 2

On the other side of the dining room is an antique tea cart and on the wall above handg two framed art works.  The first is a copy of a Marty Bell painting called, “Sweetheart’s Gate”, this is a nice complement to the two Marty Bell rose paintings across the room.  (During the Christmas season I replace this print with a framed sheet music of “Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer decorated with several pine boughs and red berries)  Hanging below the Marty Bell print is a framed personalized label from the wine we served at our wedding.  Before our wedding we took a pre-honeymoon trip to Napa Valley in northern California and when we were there we ordered the wine and champagne for our wedding reception from one of the wineries that we visited.  It is a very sentimental memento of that special day and this personalized piece represents a special event in our lives and is always a great conversation starter at our dinner parties.

Dining room framed wedding label    Dining room framed sheet music 3

The library room is our home is filled with several bookcases of books and travel souvenirs from our trips around the United States and Europe.  As mentioned in a previous Décor post, Decorating with Plates, this room is also filled with different collections from nature, such as our National Park plates, a couple of other wildlife plates as well as my husband’s rock collection, ostrich and emu eggs, abandoned bird nests, etc. are displayed in the library bookcases.  (Don’t laugh about the rock collection, I know it sounds like very strange items to collect, but my husband has done several presentations at our daughter’s school for her science class.  He does a very informative lecture on all the different types of rocks and minerals from his collection and he has become known as the “rock guy”!!)  Anyway, on one wall of the room there is a framed painted feather that we got at the Illinois State Museum and a framed owl butterfly that was a birthday present for my husband a few years ago.  Recently on a road trip to North Carolina, we stopped in West Virginia at an artist studio and bought a framed bear painted on bark.  All these items reinforce the nature theme of our library room decor.

Library butterfly and painted feather    Library Hawaii print and sheet music

On another wall of our library near the bookcases are two framed souvenirs from our trip to Hawaii a few years ago.  The first is a framed sheet music cover of “Aloha Oe” I had at the small gift shop at the Iolani Palace in Honolulu, Hawaii.  This song was written by Princess Lili’uokalani in 1877 and has become synonymous with Hawaii.  The second piece is hung below and is a beautiful print of the Hawaiian Islands (formerly known as the Sandwich Islands) that was purchased at the Polynesian Cultural Center located on the island of Oahu, Hawaii.  Tucked under the framed “Aloha Oe” music cover is an interesting item from one of the demonstrations at the Polynesian Cultural Center, it is an intricately woven palm leaves shaped into a bird.

Travel items purchased during our road trips make wonderful and unusual art work to hang in our home.  Downstairs in our basement, which we call the “California Room”, is a framed print of a map showing the 21 California Missions which was purchased in one of the mission gift shops.  When we lived in California and during our travels throughout the state we loved stopping at these iconic and unique destinations.  At each visit to a mission I would purchase a small metal mission charm.  These charms grew into a collection and when I framed the California Mission map I thought it was a great opportunity to displays the mission charms.  As you can see from the photo, we have visited 16 out of the 21 missions and we’ve got 5 more to visit on future trips back to California!

California Mission print   Fruit crate labels - framed

On the wall near our kitchen’s pantry are two California fruit crate labels.  The crate labels have become very popular collectible items and can be purchased easily online from Ebay or other websites.  The two framed labels are from a lemon packaging plant located not far from my childhood home near the San Fernando Mission in California. The packaging plant had been converted into retail shops and recently on our last visit the facility now stands vacate.  The crate labels are a nostalgic piece of California history and they make very interesting art work to hang in our home.

Finally, whenever I am antiquing during our road trips I always look for beautiful Audubon wildlife prints.  These can be relatively inexpensive depending on the size of the print so I always try to purchase a couple of them whenever I see them in the antique stores.  The art work is beautiful and the colors are usually very vibrant.  We have several of these Audubon wildlife prints hanging in our master bathroom.

Wildlife prints 1    Wildlife prints 2

Art work for a home does not always have to be expensive paintings or lithographs.  Consider unique items purchased during your travels or nostalgic items that have personal meaning or family photographs that mark special events in the lives of your family.

Decor – Floral Arrangements

Floral arrangements are the perfect decorative accessory for any room of a home.  Floral arranging is a favorite hobby of mine; I find the process very relaxing.  By using my creative skills to create lovely arrangements, I can get the exact colors and style that I need for the room’s decoration.  Most of the arrangements used throughout our home were used for the many special events during our family’s lives together and each one has great sentimental value.

Before I start describing the floral arrangements in our home, I would like to say that I use artificial flowers.  I know most people would say to use only fresh flowers when decorating a home, but the quality of artificial flowers currently available are very realistic looking.  Fresh flowers can be very expensive to purchase weekly throughout the year.  Buying artificial flowers keeps the cost to a reasonable low onetime expense. When shopping in your local craft store, be selective in choosing artificial flowers for the arrangements because there are still very poor quality ones available but there are also some excellent and realistic looking ones.  Before shopping it is helpful to have a basic idea of the style and colors needed for a particular room and to also pre-select the vase.

In our entry, there is a dark wood pedestal next to a low bench.  On the pedestal, for most of the year, there is a beautiful white rose arrangement.  This one is very special because it was used on the buffet table at our small and intimate wedding ceremony/reception in our home in California several years ago. Seasonally, I add blue feather sprays in Spring and several peasant feathers in the Fall.  This slightly changes the look of the arrangement for each season.

Entry floral arrangement - spring     Library floral arrangement

In the library, on a painted table in front of the window, is a lovely arrangement of pastel flowers in a tall ivory vase.  This tall floral arrangement was used last year for my Mother’s rosary and funeral.  I knew I wanted to make something special to honor my Mother and creating the arrangement allowed me some quiet time to think of our shared memories and to grieve for her.  After the funeral, I brought the arrangement back to our home.  It is not a sad remembrance but a joyful one for the life of a very special person in my life.

In the family room there is a table behind the sofa with two tall lamps.  Years ago, when I was creating the floral arrangements for our small and intimate wedding ceremony/reception at our home in California, I used a ceramic vase with dark pink roses and some greenery.  This floral arrangement was used on the welcome table at our wedding and it now sits on the sofa table between the lamps.

Family room floral arrangement 1     Dining room floral arrangement - fall

In our dining room, there is a floral arrangement of golden roses and greenery in a crystal vase, a wedding gift from a dear friend.  It sits on our dining room table with an antique crocheted doily that was bought a few years ago on one of our road trips.  Seasonally, I add several peasant feathers in the Fall.  This slightly changes the look of the arrangement and with the golden roses fitting in with the fall colors there is no need to purchase an additional seasonal one.

This is not a floral arrangement, but in the kitchen there is a straw basket filled with artificial fruit.  This basket sits on the kitchen counter year-round and for the different seasons I add a chocolate bunny for Spring and a jar filled with wooden candy canes for Christmas.  This is a perfect example of adding something to a display that makes it fit the season without purchasing additional items.

Kitchen vegetable arrangement - spring      Kitchen vegetable arrangement - christmas

Upstairs in our master bedroom we have lovely dark wood furnishings; a bed, dresser/mirror, armoire, old-fashioned roll-top desk and in the corner a reading area with a comfortable recliner chair.  On the dresser I have displayed our wedding photos plus photos of both of us as children.  I recently added a small floral arrangement of pale pink roses, white and green hydrangeas in a small ivory porcelain vase.  As a finishing touch I tied a pale green ribbon to the vase.

Master bedroom floral arrangement     Home office floral arrangement

As previously shown in last month’s Décor post, Home Office, there is a lovely small floral arrangement that sits on my office desk.  It started as a small ivory porcelain container that held several sprigs of green berries, clear and green crystal beads.  It is something that I look at every day.  I really liked the arrangement but it seemed like it was incomplete, so I recently added several pale pink roses.  Sometimes a little “tweaking” of an existing arrangement is required and I think it looks better.

California room floral arrangementWe jokingly refer to our downstairs as the “California Room”.  It is decorated with items that remind us of our home back in California.  There is an entire wall of black bookcases filled with our Disney memorabilia, check out this month’s Décor post for photos.  The first few years that we lived in the Midwest, we really missed Disneyland.  We also missed spending time on the weekends at the great beaches in Southern California.  On the wall opposite the Disney bookcases is a lovely oil painting of a seascape that we bought in Santa Barbara.  There are lots of seashells and other beach themed items that decorate our downstairs space.   For our daughter’s fourth birthday back in California we had an Ariel themed party.  I had purchased several dozen seashells over the internet to use as decorations around the house and for cake decorations.  With the remaining seashells, I made an arrangement of seashells that looked like white rosebuds.  It was a simple arrangement made with the seashells hot-glued onto long stems that we left over from another project.  A couple of years ago I was in Home goods and found a resin vase that resembled stacked seashells.  With the new vase and I rearranged the seashell “roses”, added some greenery and this is the arrangement that sits on the bar area in our downstairs room.

That completes the tour of the floral arrangements in our home.

Decor – Disney Memorabilia Collection

Growing up in Southern California, our family has been going to Disneyland since it first opened in the 1950s.  Later with my own children, I continued the family tradition of annual trips to Disneyland.  When I was a little girl, I also remember seeing all the Disney animated films (… the price of a movie admission was just 50 cents!)  Later, with my own children, we watched the same Disney classic movies re-released on VHS then DVD.  Then, when Disney started making new animated films again and later with Pixar, we went to the movie theater to see those films, too.  (Of course the price of a movie ticket was much more expensive and don’t get me started on the price of a drink, candy and popcorn!!)

Disney bookshelves 1  Disney bookshelves 2 Disney bookshelves 3

Over the years, we started to collect Disney Memorabilia during our numerous visits to Disneyland and we also made purchases at the Disney Store and later on the Disney website.  Our collection varies from simple park souvenirs; like admission tickets and annual passports, park brochures/maps, fast passes, collectible pins and Mickey Mouse ears, to more expensive items like water globes, character figurines, animation cels, lithographs and even autographed items.  The photos of the bookcases displaying our Disney Memorabilia only show a portion of our collection.

Disneyland E-TicketWhile going to Disneyland for almost 60 years, I have a collection of different types of park merchandise and souvenirs. Shortly after Disneyland opened in 1955, in addition to the park admission, they began selling ticket books for entrance to the different attractions. These ticket books were used until the late 1970s when they were replaced by the single admission/unlimited-ride park ticket.  I have several complete ticket books in addition to a few iconic “E-Tickets”.  I have also been saving our Disneyland parking passes, admission tickets, annual passports and brochure/park maps for the last 40 years.  When the fast-pass tickets were introduced in the late 1990s, I started collecting one for every ride that offered them.  Other “free” souvenirs include the autographs of Disney characters that our daughter has collected over the years.  Like all young girls, her favorite part was meeting the Disney princesses and getting a photo taken with them.  I know that these different paper souvenirs do not have any monetary value but it is fun to collect them.

Disney bookshelves

On the top of our Disney bookcases, there is a shadow box that displays an old Disneyland pennant, a popular souvenir item from Disneyland’s early years.  I also have stored away two Disneyland Park maps that were originally purchased for my children.  It is fun to look at the Disneyland maps and see the attractions that have come and gone over the years.

Three souvenirs displayed in our Disney Memorabilia collection are very unique items.  The first item is a Pilot’s Certificate that we received when we rode in the Pilot’s wheelhouse located on the upper deck of the Mark Twain Steamboat.  The second unique item is a signed copy of a map of the Jungle Cruise which was given to our daughter by a cast member; it makes a very rare souvenir.  The third item and one of my favorites, is my daughter’s Tinkerbell shoes autographed by the “original” Tinkerbell, Margaret Kerry, who was making a personal appearance at the Disneyland Resort and kindly signed the shoes and took a photo with my daughter.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA     OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Some our other Disneyland souvenirs include over two hundred Disney collectible pins.  Most of these pins were purchased individually and I have only engaged in the pin trading phenomenon once or twice.  The pin purchases were mostly made during our visits to Disneyland or online from e-bay when I am looking for rare or discontinued pins.  A small part of my pin collection is displayed in shadow boxes and the rest of the pins are stored away.

The first Disney characters that I started collecting were the classic Mickey Mouse, Steamboat Willie and the Fantasia Mickey Mouse items.  The collection started with two medallions that were issued back in the 1980s.  From there, the collection continued to grow with a variety of stuffed Mickeys, several large and small Mickey figurines, lithographs and animation cels.  The first time that my son and daughter visited Disneyland I bought each the classic Mickey Mouse Ears with their names embroidered on the back.  These are stored away with other special Mickey Mouse Ears, like the ones from the exclusive Club 33 and Disneyland’s 50th anniversary.

My favorite Disney character is Pinocchio.  I love the story of the little wooden puppet trying to become a real boy with the help of Jiminy Cricket.  Somehow, during the time I was a single Mom raising my son, I associate the character of Pinocchio with him and I was his Jiminy Cricket being the “conscience” that guided him through life.  For this reason, I began collecting Pinocchio items which include framed animation cels and lithographs, large and small figurines and collectible water globes.

Like most little girls, my daughter liked all the Disney Princesses and Tinkerbell but her favorite Disney character was Ariel.  Over the years, I have collected items which include both large and small porcelain Disney Princess dolls and other figurines, music boxes, autographed pictures and books.  Another special item is a “Small World” attraction water globe/music box that my daughter received as a birthday present.

Other Disney items collected include over 50 books on the subjects of Disneyland, Walt Disney and the Disney movies, as well as magazines (mostly the discontinued “E-ticket” magazine), music albums and CDs and almost all the animated Disney movies on DVDs.  We love Disney so much that we celebrated our daughter’s 5th birthday party with over 25 family and friends at Disneyland during their 50th anniversary.  We have several items commemorating the event such as: a special 50th anniversary picture frame which displays our group’s picture taken in front of the Sleeping Beauty’s Castle on the day of the party and also a lovely Disneyland 50th anniversary water globe/music box.  Since we moved to the Midwest, we have visited the Walt Disney Resort in Florida and items from those trips are also displayed in our Disney bookcase.  We have several photo albums and scrapbooks filled with photos of our Disneyland adventures over almost 60 years.  Finally, displayed seasonally on our Christmas tree every year is our large collection of Disneyland Park and Hallmark Disney ornaments.

Collecting Disney memorabilia has brought me great joy throughout the years and it provides many memories of our trips to Disneyland and all things Disney.  Let me know if you also collect Disney items, I would love to hear how your collection is displayed.

Decor – Easter Table Decorations

Easter tableOur Easter dinner is usually a very small gathering, most of our family live in other states, so there a just a few of us at the table.  This year I decide on using soft pastel colors and nature inspired decorations.

First, I set the table by starting with a lovely pale green tablecloth.  Then to bring in some texture and dimension to the table I add a pale green silken fabric that I bought at my local craft store for under $3/yd.  I arrange the fabric into soft gathers and place it in the center of the table; this will keep the table from appearing too “flat”.

Next, at each place setting I use a white rimmed dinner and salad plates, silver utensils and silver rimmed beverage glasses. I then place a rolled pale green napkin that match the tablecloth into a white porcelain napkin ring.  To add a nature element, I tucked a small blue butterfly on a wire into the napkin ring and it seems to fly over the place setting for a charming effect.  Finally, to add a touch of Easter to the table, at each place setting I set out a white porcelain egg cup with a white wooden egg.  These eggs will be used for our guests to make Jeweled Easter Eggs decorated with sparkling letters to personalize and crystal or pearl stickers for elegant party favors to take home.  Please check out the Craft post earlier this month for a complete list of supplies and simple instructions.  This is a fun activity to do before dinner!  Another idea is to create some additional ones, store them away with the other Easter decorations and next year display them in a silver bowl with a little bit of Spanish moss in the bottom.

Easter table centerpeice

For the table centerpiece, I placed a lovely white pitcher with a simple design of bunnies in the center of the table on top of the pale green silken fabric.  It is filled with pastel tulips in three different colors of tulips – white, pale pink and a very light green.  I think it makes a lovely spring centerpiece.  For this Easter table, I placed white bunnies on either side of the centerpiece to add a festive touch and tucked them into the pale green silken fabric.

Easter table butterflies

To complete the Easter table decorations, I tied fishing line to the dining room chandelier and hot-glued white and blue butterflies.  This final nature element gives the table an effect that the butterflies appear to be flying over the table.  Our weather outside might still have cool temperatures but it seems like it is spring has finally come into our dining room!

For a description of the additional decorations in our dining room, please check out the Décor post,  Easter Home Decorations.