Monday, March 3, 2014

Change In Tissue Box Size

IMPORTANT INFORMATION: My tissue covers were designed to fit and slide right over the family size 200-2ply Puffs box). However, this size tissue is becoming difficult to find and it may be in the process of being replaced by the 180-2ply box, which is about ¾” shorter than the previous 200-2ply box.

If you like my covers and you still want to use them there are 34possible options that I have found:

1) You could let me find a tissue box that fits your cover and I will prepare it so that it ready for use when you receive it. This accessory is available in my etsy shop  
 
2)  Best case scenario would be that you could still locate a 200-2ply Puffs box . . . cut the top off of it after it is empty, and refill it. This works perfectly and I recommend that you buy a couple of extra boxes for future use, if possible. 

Click here for instructions on how to modify your box  

3)  Buy a large 210 2-ply Kleenex or other brand tissue box. They are still on the market right now and it is the same size as the old Puffs box. You could then cut off the top and the front opening and refill it with Puffs tissues. This would also work perfectly. Again, I recommend that you buy a couple of extra boxes and keep them for future use, just in case the Kleenex box sizes get smaller in size also.                            

Click here for instructions on how to modify your Kleenex box
 
4)  You can use my covers with the available 180 2-ply size box. As with the other 2 options, you would want to modify your Puffs box by cutting off the top and then refilling it (use the same instructions on how to modify your box as above). Overall, this shorter box is not quite as attractive as the taller box because as the tissues get used, the shorter box becomes visible in the background. However, it is an option. The picture below gives you a visual idea of what the shorter box means for your intended use before you decide whether or not you want to place an order.


Please feel free to contact me at petra@tissueboxcoversetc.com with any questions you have . . . and also take a look at other helpful information about how to modify your tissue box on this blog.

Have a wonderful day, Petra  

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Christmas Tree Traditions

We like to enjoy and admire our decorated Christmas tree as soon as possible after Thanksgiving until New Year. For this reason I have switched to my 6 foot artificial tree over 20 years ago. Sure, it will never have the charm of a real tree, but is beautiful when decorated with the oodles of treasured ornaments I have collected over the last 35 years, and it doesn’t drip sticky sap onto our carpet or dry out over the 4 week period it is on display.    
We love our Christmas tree in all its splendor! Generally we have always brought it up from the basement after all of the other Christmas decorations have been carefully placed, and I have lots of them, but this year I decided that we would put it up first and I’m surprised how much more we’ve enjoyed it. I think I may have started a new Christmas time tradition at our house.
  



Christmas trees have a long and varying history of tradition. The custom of decorating a Christmas tree actually started in Germany as early as the 15th century. They have traditionally been evergreen trees such as spruce, pines, or fir but I was surprised to find out that artificial trees were already used in Germany during the 19th century due to deforestation in that area. At that time they were often made out of wood and goose feathers versus our more familiar contemporary PVC trees.
 
When I was growing up in Germany in the 60’s and 70’s, there was no deforestation and I do not remember ever seeing any of those old fashioned artificial trees. I do however, remember numerous times, going out into an nearby forest with my dad and a couple of my  siblings, usually on Christmas Eve, where we picked out and chopped down the Christmas tree of our choice and hauled it home in the family car. I then stayed up, usually with my mom and my older sister, and we decorated the tree with mostly handmade ornaments, a few glass bulbs, and candles (this was before electric candles were available) after all the younger siblings went to bed. We would enjoy the tree for a brief couple of days before we took it down again. During that time we would occasionally gather around the tree and very carefully and only briefly light the candles under close supervision. It was always a magical moment when we lit the candles for the first time on Christmas morning . . . but to this day I am still extremely grateful that we never started a fire.



For me it is too much work and not long enough time to enjoy my tree for just a couple of days. However, I still have a lot of family and friend contacts in Germany, and it is still not uncommon that one or more of them will tell me that they are putting up their Christmas tree on Christmas Eve as part of their Christmas ritual . . . and although the real candles are still a traditional part of the Christmas tree decorations for most of us, they are no longer lit on their tree or on ours. Gratefully we now enjoy the twinkling of our safe and colorful electric lights on timers !
 
We love our Christmas tree traditions and I hope you are enjoying yours as much as we are ours.
 

 

Happy Holidays





 

 

 

Sunday, December 1, 2013

My Website has a new look !

My Christmas Holiday section of my website has a new look with greatly expanded information  similar to my etsy shop just in time for the Christmas shopping season. Take a look at my ever expanding

Handcrafted Christmas and Winter Tissue Box Covers 


Here are just a few of my beautiful new designs that I've added this year.




 



 

 


Find my whole selection of My Handcrafted Christmas and Winter Tissue Box Covers  through this link
   

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Thanksgiving in America


A little bit about Thanksgiving in America

Thanksgiving was originally founded as a religious observance among many regions and religions around the world, but in this country it naturally dates back to colonial times. On this day, near the end of harvest time, members of the community would give prayers of thanks for the blessing of the harvests received in these special Thanksgiving ceremonies.

Early traditions of Thanksgiving migrated with early settlers from Europe and merged with Native Americans celebrations. In 1621, the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged today as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies. For more than two centuries, days of thanksgiving were celebrated by individual colonies and states in their own individual ways and it wasn't until 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, that President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national ‘Thanksgiving Day’ to be held and celebrated on the final Thursday each November.

In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt decided to break with this tradition. November had five Thursdays that year (instead of the more-common four), and he declared the fourth Thursday as Thanksgiving rather than the fifth one. His plan was to establish this holiday on the next-to-last Thursday in November from then on. However, Roosevelt's change was widely disregarded by numerous states and they continued to celebrate Thanksgiving on the traditional last Thursday of November.  Even after it was signed into federal law, in December 1941, which fixed the date of Thanksgiving as the fourth Thursday of November, a few states continued to celebrate this holiday as they had been, until as late as 1956.

In the US, we are used to serving certain traditional food at Thanksgiving meals. Baked or roasted turkey is usually the main item on most Thanksgiving tables, so much so that Thanksgiving is also often called "Turkey Day"      . Long time favorites such as stuffing, mashed potatoes with gravy, yams, cranberry sauce, sweet corn, and various fall vegetables such as squashes, . . . and off course . . . pumpkin pie, is rarely missing from a American Thanksgiving dinner. Surprisingly enough to me, according to history, all of these foods with the possible exception of turkey were actually native to the Americas at the time and they were introduced to the settlers when they arrived. Yum . . . Yum. What a treat !  

Thanksgiving Day has become an entrenched national tradition in this country, celebrated by most. It is a time when we give thanks for everything good in our lives, when we give thanks for all of our blessings throughout the year, including the bountiful harvest that allows us to fill our tables with delicious and plentiful foods while gathered in celebration with people we cherish most in our lives. But let us also remember that it is also a time to share the bounty of our good fortune with people who are less fortunate than us and who are in need of our help. May we all find plenty to be grateful for and enjoy a day filled with blessings of peace and joy . . . great food and even greater company.  
 
 Happy Turkey Day !

 

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Where did Halloween come from?


Have you ever wondered where Halloween came from?

Here is a short history of what I found out about its origin. 
Halloween's origin (also known as All Hallows' Eve) dates back to the Celts, who lived 2,000 years ago in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom, and northern France. It was their celebration of their New Year on November 1. This day marked the end of summer and the harvest and the beginning of the dark, cold winter, a time of year that was often associated with human death. Celts believed that on the night before the New Year, the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became very thin and that the ghosts of the dead returned to earth. To commemorate this event, they built huge sacred bonfires, where they wore costumes, danced, and attempted to tell fortunes.

Halloween Comes to America

The celebration of Halloween was extremely limited in North America until the mass Irish and Scottish immigration during the early to mid-1800s.  It stayed very confined to these immigrant communities until it gradually spread into mainstream North America by the early 1900s. Originating from these Irish and English traditions, Americans began to dress up in costumes and go house to house asking for food or money, a practice that eventually became today's "trick-or-treat" tradition.

 

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Seasonal Change

Summer will soon be coming to an end and Autumn will be knocking on our door. Get ready and embrace this seasonal change by adding one of my beautiful and very practical Autumn / Harvest tissue box covers to your seasonal home décor. My beautiful covers will stand out in any room and they also make a fabulous gift !

Visit my Etsy Shop or visit my website TissueBoxCoversEtc  for my complete Fall listings.



 
















Monday, August 5, 2013

How to use my tissue covers with any brand

This post is for my detail oriented user. Although I attempted to design my covers to fit the family size Puffs box as perfectly as possible, it is not 100% precise. At times you may be able to get a slight glimpse of the store bought box underneath your beautiful cover. If you would like to fix this, as I did, you can do so easily.
 
Here is how:           Note: you only do this one time
 
1)   Buy one Family size Puffs box (approx. 9" x 5" x 5")
2)  With a marker or pen, mark approximately one inch around the front opening as shown by the dotted line in picture 1 below. 
 
3)   Use scissors or an Exacto knife (knife works best) to carefully cut off the top of the box as shown in picture 2 below.  
4)  Use scissors to carefully cut approximately one inch off around the front opening as shown by the dotted line in picture 2. 
 
 
5)   Reinforce each of the upper corners of the box with Scotch tape or a little glue as shown in picture 3 below. If you use glue, secure each corner with a paperclip or a cloth pin until the glue is dry.
6)  Refill the box with your favorite brand as needed.
7) Slide your great looking tissue cover over your favorite tissues and ENJOY !

 
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