All Posts By

Nicole

Save on Scotch™ Thermal Laminators at Walmart

This shop has been compensated by Collective Bias, Inc. and its advertiser. All opinions are mine alone. #LaminateWithScotch #CollectiveBias

Can you believe it’s time to think about a brand new year? January is right around the corner and I know you are ready to get organized and clutter free for 2017. I have got a great option to help you with your New Year’s resolutions! Make a checklist for all your house cleaning chores, create menu charts for your new weight loss goals or design a printable budget tracker that will help you stay on target.

The Scotch™ Thermal Laminator and Scotch™ Letter Size Thermal Pouches are on rollback during the month of December for only $9.98 each! These products are typically priced at $19.97 for laminators and $12.88 for the pouches, so this is the time to buy!

 

 

Shop Here!

I know how important it is to have the right tools on hand when you’re getting organized and ready to move into a new year, so be sure to check out this great deal at Walmart!

DIY 6-Hour Crochet Throw

 
 
There are very few things more comforting when cold weather hits than a comfy, cozy afghan. No matter how cold and dreary a day it might be outside, just knowing I’m only a few rooms away from a hot cup of tea, a great new book, and warm afghan always lifts my spirits. The only issue with Afghans? Their price tag. Sometimes in excess of over $100.00 in many retail stores!
 
So recently, when in need of a new afghan for my more minimalist, neutral master bedroom bedding, I decided to try my hand at making my own crochet version at home. Not only was I able to use several skeins of ethically-sourced yarn I had on hand, but I was able to make an afghan in just under six hours.
 
That’s right – you can crochet an entire 45″ x 60″ inch (114.5 x 152.5 cm) afghan in just one evening. So today I want to share with you this fun and frugal way to crochet an afghan throw.
 
Whether you drape this afghan over your living room couch, adorn the bottom of a cozy winter bed, or make up an afghan to give as a last-minute New Year’s Eve hostess gift, it is sure to get some use. The best part? This warm, chunky yarn afghan can be made while you catch up on your favorite television shows. Might I suggest Season 2 of Fuller House?

So without further ado, here’s what you will need to get started:

 

 

 

 

 

So that’s it, folks! How easy was that? A very basic pattern which turns into an extraordinary afghan. So I hope you will all take a hand at making your own afghan this coming season, and if you do decide to make one of your own, be sure to tag me on Instagram @TheLadyPrefers2Save to let me see how awesome your creations are as well! 

Please note, feel free to pin this project for your own use. for makers looking to replicate this use, please note my patterns are not for commercial use and should you use my pattern in a post of your own, always play it forward and be sure to link your post back to my original listing! Enjoy your afghans!

How to be a Christmas Eve Person

 

I grew up a Christmas Eve person. Some of my most joyful memories of this celebration happened on that very night. I first realized my love of the spoken word during a church holiday pageant. My Uncle Danny’s yearly vow to be well from his cold-weather bought of bronchitis, which thankfully he always come Christmas morning. How my grandmother loved to create a new wreath for her home each year, which she laid out for the world to see each Christmas eve. and I took turns studying each beautifully wrapped package under the tree, trying to guess its contents.

As a child, I also loved Christmas eve for the opportunity it gave me to hone my spidey senses. I liked to studying each beautifully wrapped package under our family tree, trying to guess its contents. The house was filled with the delicious aroma of fresh baked cookies set out for Santa Claus, fancy buttery cookies from local bakeries, and even a few janky, but lovingly decorated cut out cookies created by yours truly. 

I even loved the simple joys of the season. As the only child in the home, I had the tasks of both eating the last piece of advent calendar chocolate and placing the porcelain baby Jesus in the nativity scene by the Christmas tree.

But despite this joy, my home life was often far from happy. I remember fondly each Christmas eve, as we opened our presents, that instead of sharing in the pure joy of being together as a family, the laughing and oohing and ahhing over the best gifts we each received, we were busy passing around bags. Bags to collect torn wrapping paper and bags to collect back the toys and presents we had just opened. These bags contained the holiday facade of our home, the veneer of purchasing gifts to keep up with appearances for the rest of the world to see, so we could purchase gifts that were never destined to stay within our home.

You see, my grandmother didn’t believe in allowing children to keep more than a one holiday toy each year, which generally left me with one gift, generally a book, and without fail each Christmas morning all my gifts were taken with us to mass, where the presents were given to children less fortunate than myself. This was of course coupled with her impulses to overspend each holiday season, so in lieu of buying fewer gifts for colleagues, co-workers, and neighbors, and instead of allocating those funds to purchase gifts for those less fortunate, those needed gifts came from those in her own home. We lived and gave like that of the Pharisees.

While I always seemed to get exactly what I hoped for, I never remembered feeling the tactile nature of the day. The one toy I was able to keep was generally a collectible. Generally an American Girl doll or holiday Barbie, and though lovely and incredibly generous gifts, these were toys to be seen and not used, gifts that remained encased on high away shelves, never to be loved. The same toys that cemented to me a feeling of  Christmas mornings in my home being very bittersweet, at least that’s how I remember it. 

Then later, even as an adult, when recanting these experiences to my newly found birth mother, who upon asking me how my childhood holidays occurred, discounted my memories and relished in believing that my memories were nothing more than childish lies. And so it’s for those two reasons that I’ve always held a small bit of guilt for not being one of those merry-makers who love Christmas morning. The same memories of Christmas mornings that to this day always leave a small pang of disappointment in my heart each year.

Now friends, don’t think this story to be one of sadness and despair. It was because of these events that I was able to make a great Christmas eve revelation even from an early age, that the hours leading up to Christmas Eve each year were some of the happiest times in my life. Times when business was replaced with purpose. Where talents were put before the world to see. Where holiday music played and when hearing my home wrapped up in the sounds of my uncle’s laughter meant more to me than any present that could be unwrapped beneath the tree. 

I learned that the true message of Christmas Eve was simple: You are loved. Loved by God. Loved by your family of choice, and even for a few moments, loved by the world. Everything that I remember and hold dear to in those childhood memories tells me that.

For me, the greatest value in being a Christmas eve person, including you all my dearest readers, should be the same: Christmas eve is a splendid time of year because of the birth of Jesus Christ, and that is the kind of good news and great joy that no amount of conspicuous consumerism, bittersweet memories, nor the longing to see loved one’s long since passed, can ever take away. 

As you are reading this I am spending time with my own family, with those who make tomorrow’s sorrows seems so small in comparison to the memories I will be making on this day. So friends, take heart. I have always been a Christmas eve kind of person, and I hope in some small way you all will be too! Today is a celebration of joy. A day of peace. A moment of great jubilation. A time when presents simply don’t matter. 

Take time today for yourself, for self-care, for reflection, and above all else, for laughter. Remember to find moments of joy. To be enamored with hope, for this is what being a Christmas eve person is all about. 

Save on Scotch™ Thermal Laminators at Walmart

This shop has been compensated by Collective Bias, Inc. and its advertiser. All opinions are mine alone. #LaminateWithScotch #CollectiveBias

Do you have your gift list almost complete but still can’t decide what to get the teachers in your family’s life? How about a Scotch™ Thermal Laminator and Scotch™ Letter Size Thermal Pouches? Right now, they are on rollback for $9.98 each!

The Scotch™ Thermal Laminator is a great idea to help you finish off last minute teacher gifts. Just imagine how excited your child’s teacher will be with their own laminator so they can create name tags for the student’s desk, job charts and reusable student worksheets. Give the teachers in your life a gift that will help make their classrooms more efficient and fun all year round!

The Scotch™ Thermal Laminator and Scotch™ Letter Size Thermal Pouches are on rollback during the month of December for only $9.98 each! These products are typically priced at $19.97 for laminators and $12.88 for the pouches, so this is the time to buy!

 

Shop Here

I know how important it is to save money on last minute gift ideas, so be sure to check out this great deal at Walmart!

DIY Crock Pot Potpourri Gift Jars

 

There is just something special about the smell of Christmas. Smells of cinnamon, fresh cranberries, earthy rosemary, and vibrant citrus scents. It’s with these scents in mind that I want to share with you all today my DIY Crock Pot Potpourri!

This potpourri is safer that the usual stove top variety and will make your house so welcoming for the holidays. It will leave your guests will be asking you how you made it!

Here’s how to make it:

 

 

  • 1 cup fresh cranberries
  • 1 orange sliced
  • 3 cinnamon sticks
  • 1 tablespoon of cloves
  • 3 springs of fresh rosemary (optional)
  • 1/5 gallon water

 

  1. Place all your fresh ingredients in small crock pot and fill about halfway full of water. Turn your crock pot to high heat and leave unlidded.

  2. Allow your contents to come to a full simmer on their own for two hours, and then turn to the low heat setting thirty minutes prior to guest arriving.

  3. This mixture, liquids, and aromatics, can also be jarred, stored in the refrigerator, and re-used for up to a week, making this recipe a great way to use up pre-composted citrus and fruit scraps left over from baking sessions as well!

  4. Essential oils can also be added to this potpourri. Oils such as lemon, cinnamon, spruce, peppermint, frankincense, and ginger would may great additions to this recipe as well!

 

 

Now in addition to using this recipe at home for my own family during the holiday season, I also like to give this recipe jarred as holiday hostess gifts to party’s my family attend, as well as parting gifts to friends and family we entertain at home as well.

The nice things about giving this potpourri as a gift are that the contents can be created ahead of time (up to a week), jarred, and refrigerated until giving. Also be sure to add small, simple touches to your jars, such as adding fresh springs of rosemary, bay leaves, and star of anise.

Also consider adding striped bakers twine, raffia, rope, or fabric, and a handmade card to make your jar a memorable gift for others this season. 

Personally, I find this potpourri to be nothing short of amazing and will be sure to be a favorite at your next get together, too! So everyone, do you have a favorite way to scent your home over the holidays? I’d love to hear about it below! 

The Sounds of a Roberts Family Christmas

Please note, all music herein the property of their respective artists, record labels, and Youtube uploaders. 

 

 

 

Though you’re busy baking cookies and trimming the tree, you may find yourself in need of a little downtime this season with your family. Why not use that time to gather up your loved ones and enjoy some classic and festive holiday music? These 25 timeless classics are favorites in our home each year and we’re sure your entire family will enjoy too!

 

Hawaiian Christmas: Jimmy Buffett Mele Kalikimaka (1980)

 

I want a hippopotamus for Christmas, by Gayla Peevey (1953)

 

Feliz Navidad, by Jose Feliciano (1970)

 

“Dónde Está Santa Claus” (Metro Records), by Augie Rios (1958)

 

The Grinch Song, sung by Boris Karloff (1966)

 

A Charlie Brown Christmas – Christmas Time is Here Song, by the Vince Guaraldi Trio (1965)

 

Judy Garland – Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas (Meet Me In St. Louis, 1944)

 

“The Christmas Song,” by Nat King Cole (1961)

 

“Santa Baby!,” by Eartha Kitt (1953)

 

“Baby It’s Cold Outside,” Dean Martin & Doris Day Duet (1959)

 

“White Christmas,” by Bing Crosby (1954)

 

“Jingle Bell Rock,” by Bobby Helms (Decca Records) (1957)

 

“Blue Christmas,” Live by Elvis Presley (1968)

 

HAPPY XMAS (War Is Over) – John Lennon & Yoko Ono & The PLASTIC ONO BAND with The Harlem Community Choir (1971)

 

“Rebel Jesus,” by The Chieftains, featuring Jackson Browne (1991)

 

“Mary, did you know,” by Kenny Rogers, featuring Wynonna Judd (1996)

 

“Run Rudolph Run,” by Chuck Berry (1958)

 

“Rocking Around the Christmas Tree”-Brenda Lee (1958)

 

“I saw Mommy kissing Santa Claus,” performed by The Jackson Five (1971)

 

“Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” performed by The Temptations (1970)

 

“The Little Drummer Boy (Peace On Earth),” performed by Bing Crosby & David Bowie (1977)

 

“Little Saint Nick”- The Beach Boys (1964)

 

“Christmas in New Orleans,” by Louis Armstrong (1954)

 

“Holly Jolly Christmas,” by Burl Ives (1965)

 

“A Saints Christmas,” by Kermit Ruffins (2000)

 

So that’s it everyone, my family’s 25 favorite holiday songs. I encourage you all to take some time this season to let loose and enjoy a few of these favorite songs with your loved ones at home. So now I have to ask, do you have any family favorite songs at Christmas? I’d love to hear about them below!

Save on Scotch™ Thermal Laminators at Walmart

This shop has been compensated by Collective Bias, Inc. and its advertiser. All opinions are mine alone. #LaminateWithScotch #CollectiveBias

Are you looking to get organized during this busy time of year? Do you need place cards to help decorate the table setting at your holiday party? Are you looking for a way to preserve your traditional recipes or check list for your holiday shopping? If you need a little extra help getting your final holiday plans finished, check out this great deal at Walmart on the Scotch™ Thermal Laminator and Scotch™ Letter Size Thermal Pouches!

The Scotch™ Thermal Laminator and Scotch™ Letter Size Thermal Pouches are on rollback during the month of December for only $9.98 each! Laminators are typically priced at $19.97 and pouches are $12.88, so this is the time to buy!

 

 

I know how important it is to save money when you’re getting organized for the holidays, so be sure to check out this great deal at Walmart!