Christmas Décor Wishlist

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Last Christmas was a nightmare décor-wise. We had moved into our new home a matter of weeks before, so our Christmas tree was the last one standing at a local garden centre. It was the Mr Burns of Christmas trees, bald and bony, and stood in the corner of our lounge as a stark reminder that we were so totally unprepared. I absolutely hate tinsel too so there was no disguising how underwhelming it was.

This totally characterised our Christmas. We unwrapped hastily wrapped presents amidst dozens of unpacked boxes and ate a turkey dinner at an undressed table atop a cheap plastic tablecloth we bought two years ago for one of Dexter’s birthdays. Gin and tequila helped inject some fun into proceedings, but I’ve promised myself this year would be different.

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Image credit: ZestofAlice

So I’ve already started thinking about themes for this year’s festivities. The idea is that no visitor will be in any doubt what time of year it is - fairy-lights and gold everything will smack them in the face the moment they step through the threshold.

House of Fraser have tipped that Nordic-schemes are set to be big this year - with copper, gold and cobalt featuring heavily in their Christmas shop. Heavy textures such as faux fur and distressed birch help create depth, punctuated by leafy table and mantelpiece garlands. You’re bringing the outside in; whether that’s an enchanted forest or snow-capped alpine vista.

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Table settings should be all-out glamour with the feel of a decadent bygone era. Team high polished metallic textures and tones with deco prints & patterns. Simple touches such as gold-dipped glasses and decanters, copper cutlery and low-hanging decorations will help you create extra interest, and bevelled mirrors will reflect candle light to add to the ambience.

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Image credit: House of Fraser: Christmas lookbook

The tree itself should feature oversized glass baubles, simple fairy lights and be lightly sprayed with faux snow. The less-is-more mantra is definitely out the window this year.

Of course it’s not all about the trappings, but there’s nothing more relaxing on Christmas Day than to sit down at the end of a long day with a glass of red wine, surrounded by pretty things. And no better way to ease any stresses resulting from family dramas, over-excited children and any guilt you might be feeling from the annual splurge.

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ALL AVAILABLE AT HOUSE OF FRASER: Shibori dinnerware from Christiane Lemieux from £10 / Cocktail tray from Christiane Lemieux £48 / Faux-fur stocking from Linea Home £30 / Peacock and glitter crackers (set of 6) from Linea Home £30 / Silver mercury tree decoration from Linea Home £6 / Mercury bells (set of 2) from Linea Home £10 / Large sun mirror from Christiane Lemieux £180 / Cocktail shaker from Christiane Lemieux £25 / Champagne charger plate from Biba Home £12 / Snowflake lantern from Linea Home £30 / Century 24 piece cutlery set from Christiane Lemieux £180 / Baroque gold glassware range from Biba Home from £14 / Ice bucket from Biba Home £40 / Glitter hummingbird decoration from Linea Home £8

Christmas décor is an investment, so I’d recommend starting early. Think carefully about the number of guests you’ll have, and allow for a couple extra for last minute surprises and future Christmases. Make sure the bulk of your purchases can be used all year round to ensure you’re not flittering your cash away on one day. Charger plates, glassware and cutlery sets can all be used to dress your table for dinner parties throughout the year so are great long-term purchases.

Have you thought about your Christmas theme this year?


“Thanks for asking. No, I’m not dead”

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I’ve had almost two months away from the blog now. A few of you have nervously tweeted me to see if I’m still alive and I dread to think how many PRs have emailed to give me a bollocking for missing deadlines.

It would be much easier returning now if I had a decent reason for stepping away. Another pregnancy, a nasty accident, a relationship breakdown, an impromptu charity mission… any of these would be suitably sexy excuses for neglecting my blog, my one source of income and the relationships I’ve built through it.

The truth is however, I haven’t been up to much at all. Christmas passed in a wine-induced haze, my birthday came and went, and before I knew it, the days had slipped into weeks. There have been no dramas, no tears and no real celebrations either. At the magical age of 33, a few Facebook messages are about all I can stand on my birthday, and Christmas is simply an excuse to get plastered before midday so the squabbling over toys, dry turkey and shit festive television becomes a little more bearable.

It was nice. Nice to know the only responsibility I had was to my children. I spent time reading to them, playing peg puzzles and watching Disney movies in the day with the blinds drawn. I managed to cook a few meals for Craig and I, and had a neat little routine going with the dishwasher - that’s to say, I actually emptied it in the morning rather than pretended to have forgotten it when Craig came home from work. I swung the vacuum cleaner around every few days, and the house saw a few spritzes of Mr Sheen to boot.

Life began to make sense again, and things behind the front door steadily began to look like I imagine every other family home to look like. For the school-run my make-up was on point and my hair was straightened. I remembered His Lordship’s P.E Kit and book bag on the right day, and even met up with the other school mums for cheeky glasses of wine at lunchtime.

Me and Mine

All this was possible because I stopped writing. I stopped waking in the night to scribble down ideas. I stopped answering the 300+ emails that landed in my inbox. I stopped babysitting the children, and actually parented them. I stopped blogging.

Sounds like a good thing, right? Dare-I-say-it - a sensible decision.

Yet normal just doesn’t work for this family. I can’t be that mum that sits at the kitchen table overseeing her children stamp cookie cutters into playdough. I hate Disney with a passion. I don’t get any sense of joy from making bento lunchboxes and I positively hate asking Craig to sub me £10 to take the kids to a softplay centre.

I don’t think the kids like it either to be honest. I pick up a 12″ Hulk figure and have him smash Nightclub Barbie, and Dexter quietly rolls his eyes, plucks them from both me and smooths down Barbie’s tutu. I swathe Heidi in blankets and arrange her on my lap in time for Twirlywoos, and she none-too-politely wriggles to the other side of the sofa.

That’s not to say I’m unappreciated. They come to me to arbitrate when one has stolen a toy from the other, or when they trip over one of the many toys strewn across the lounge floor - but this isn’t new, they did this when I sat at the dining room in front of my laptop too. They plant the same number of random kisses on my cheeks throughout the day, and they still grin back at me when I grin at them. In short, they prefer that I’m seen and not heard.

So if I’m not really adding anything to their lives by giving up the blog, and I’m driving them and myself nuts trying to ingratiate myself to them, why do it? Similarly, if Craig doesn’t give too much of a shit if the dishwasher is empty or not, why quit the blog to do it?

I think I was designed to be busy, born to be stressed, and maybe even destined to blog. I’ve kept a notebook since age 6, wrote plays & stories from age 10, and have worked in social media since the conception of Twitter. Blogging is as much part of me as being a mum. I’ve kept this blog since the moment I found out I was pregnant with Dexter, and Craig only knew me a month before I started writing it. He’s well used to my tantrums when the internet cuts out, or the tears at 1am because I’m still typing & I’ve missed a Big Brother Live Eviction. It’s been a part of our lives, like a third child, from the off.

So, I’m guessing that means I’m back in the game. I won’t pretend it’s good to be back, but it does somehow feel right.


Win this Christmas with Sky Movies #SproutChristmas Competition

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Although my tree isn’t up yet and I still haven’t bought a single present, the advent calendars were rolled out a few mornings ago and the kids have seen Father Christmas at Dexter’s school fete. At 3 years old, this is the first year he’s understood the significance of Christmas and he’s very excited.

Helping us set the scene for Christmas and build up the excitement are, as ever, Christmas ads. You’re sat there engrossed in the grim theatre of I’m a Celebrity when Ant and Dec guide us through to a break and our hearts melt as the big boys trawl out their lavish productions.

Among those who have surpassed themselves this year are Sky Movies. Their fun-filled extravaganza is definitely a contender for Christmas ad of the year and taps into some of our much-loved family movie favourites. It follows the story of Rosie who sulkily nabs the Brussel Sprouts off her Christmas dinner plate and disappears under the table after being told to eat them. In her sneaky endeavours she meets many a child’s idol as she flicks between film scenes trying to get rid. She swans through Cinderella’s ballroom casually tossing sprouts in champagne flutes, fends off a hostile dinosaur with a sprout as she helps the characters from Night at the Museum, and manages to dump another during an animated exchange with Baymax from Big Hero 6 - all films that are available over the festive period on Sky Movies.

So capitalising on the theme of the much maligned brussel sprout, Sky Movies invited a few bloggers to recreate a movie using the green version of Marmite. It just so happened, I was one of them. I chose Titanic, and well… this is how I managed to offend James Cameron on more levels than I’d care to mention.

Not alone in my efforts, here are some of my fellow bloggers giving it a go: The Oliver’s Madhouse, What the Redhead Said, The Mini Mes and Me (sit tight for this one), Henry’s Blog and The Yorkshire Dad (not long to wait)… Yes we all spent hours putting these beauties together. Well worth popping a few popcorn kernels ey?

Sooooo…. Given we all made wallys of ourselves, how do you fancy doing the same? … No?

What I said you could Win Sky TV* for a year or £100 vouchers?

If you fancy yourself as the next JJ Abrams, enter the Sky Movies #SproutChristmas Competition and and win big in time for Christmas. Just rip open a packet of sprouts and film a 2-3 min movie and you’ve sorted Christmas dinner or your partner’s or your kids’ pressies!

Sound too much like hard work? Well my movie took a few hours in total. They’re not asking for the new Wallace & Gromit, just a quicky Smartphone-made movie uploaded to their Facebook page. Pop on over to Sky Movies Facebook page for the lowdown and some rather hilarious entries!

Twitter fan? off you pop then - @SkyMovies!

Don’t want to enter but want to see all these great movies whilst supping Moët & Chandon and nicking the Snickers out of your child’s selection box - check out Sky Movies!

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