Wednesday, December 11, 2024

How to Make Vintage Christmas Pipe Cleaner Cone Dolls

Dolls and crafts made from pipe cleaners have been around for a very long time. Last year, I came across a tutorial from Pyrex Girl on TikTok showing how to make vintage-style pipe cleaner (chenille stem) dolls for Christmas and I set about to make three of them.

I kept one for myself and gave the other two to Harris Sisters Deanna and Misty.


These were fun crafts to make and if you're the crafty sort, you can to make them too! They blend in seamlessly with other vintage Christmas decor.

The directions written below are step-by-step guidelines to follow to create these dolls, but if you are a visual learner, I would encourage you to watch the Pyrex Girl tutorial.



Supplies You'll Need to Make Vintage Christmas Chenille Stem Dolls

Pipe Cleaners or Chenille Stems in Colors of Choice

Scissors or Wire Cutters

Hot Glue and Glue Gun

Cardboard/Paper Cone in Desired Height

Doll Head

Other Decorative Items like Pom-Poms, Sequins, Beads, etc. (optional)

  1. Fold each chenille stem in half and cut with scissors or wire cutters.
  2. Fold each half chenille stem piece in half and cut with scissors or wire cutters. (Each chenille stem should produce 4 chenille stem pieces.)
  3. Fold the four chenille stem pieces in half and set aside.
  4. Repeat the first three steps until you have a supply of folded chenille stem pieces, then hot glue each folded piece in a row at the bottom of the cardboard cone, so that the u-shape overhangs the bottom by about half. Repeat gluing each folded piece until the row is complete. (Note: For each row, you will be gluing the open end and the bent, U-shaped end will always be toward the bottom.)
  5. Next, glue the next row so that the u-shape of that row overlaps the previously glued row by about half.
  6. Continue gluing rows until you get to the top of the cone.
  7. When finished gluing all rows, turn up all chenille pieces so that all U-shaped pieces stick out 90 degrees and form an L-shape when the cone is sitting on a flat surface.
  8. If necessary or desired, wrap the doll head with a chenille stem to create a hat or ear muffs. Use glue to secure. 
  9. Glue the doll head to the top of the cone.
  10. Create arms by twisting chenille stems together and a wrapping them around the neck area. Glue if necessary to secure.
  11. Cover the area where the doll head meets the cone with another chenille stem and glue. Use your own design skills here to create a scarf, a flower, or whatever you think looks best!
  12. If desired, decorate the doll with additional craft items like pom-poms, sequins, beads, etc.
  13. Don't forget to sign and date the doll inside the cone.


Notes:

The number of chenille stems you'll need will depend on the height of your cone. The three dolls you see here use a cone approximately 11 inches tall at their base. Premade paper cones come in standard sizes.

The doll heads I used came from Target elf ornaments. The heads on these ornaments were plastic and the bodies and elf hats were fabric. It was easy to remove the fabric body and elf hat from the plastic head. Other options for doll heads include: 

  • Repurpose an Elf on the Shelf (sometimes these will show up at thrift stores)
  • Other elf ornaments
  • If you want more realistic faces, consider Barbie dolls (these are also found at thrift stores)
  • If you plan on making a large amount of these or want to share with friends doing the same craft, you can get a set of 12 elf heads for crafting
  • If you have any artistic abilities, you can paint a face on a large wooden bead and use that for the head
Make sure to check out Pyrex Girl on Instagram and Tik Tok for other inspiration photos of the pipe cleaner dolls she's made!

 


Other Vintage Christmas Crafts You Might Be Interested In:



Monday, December 2, 2024

How to Plan a Christmas Ball

As The Harris Sisters prepare for the holiday season, we wanted to bring you (yet another) idea for a themed Christmas party. Over the past few years, we've brought you a few different ideas for Christmas parties: 

This year's theme is A Christmas Ball!

Now, I know what you're thinking . . . isn't this a little fancy schmancy? 


Never fear! The Harris Sisters' Christmas Ball is a play on words! And we've got all the details covered below so that you can host your very own "Christmas Ball" yourself! (Easy peasy!)

We're Having a Ball This Christmas - Won't You Join Us?

Start with an invitation that matches your Christmas Ball theme. Because people's calendars tend to fill up around the holidays, make sure to send your invitations well in advance of your party date. If you want go all out and have your guests to dress a certain way (fancy Regency-era dress a-la Bridgerton-style?) - make sure to add that to your invitations. If you'd like them to bring a round (ball-shaped food) to add to your party menu, add that to your invitations too! Check out these invitations we found for the Have a Ball Christmas theme:

Bridgerton-Style Have a Ball This Christmas Party Invitation

A Christmas Ball Party Menu

You'll have lots of fun planning a menu for this party (because this is where the pun comes into play). For our Christmas Ball, we chose to serve appetizers and desserts that were round or ball-shaped food. Make sure to tell guests the theme of the party and ask them to sign up for ball shaped food item to build your menu. 

Peanut Butter Balls and Orange Balls


Here's the menu we used for our Christmas Ball Party with links to recipes:

Sausage Balls and Crockpot BBQ Sriracha Meatballs


How to Decorate for a Christmas Ball Party

Since the round food items were the main "ingredient" of this theme party, we chose very simple decorations. Fill a few large glass containers with vintage glass ornaments, use them to decorate your table, and you're all set.



What Music to Play at My Christmas Ball

Before your Christmas Ball is in full swing, make sure you download some of your favorite Christmas music to play at your party. (You'll be Rockin' a-ROUND the Christmas tree in no time!) 

If you're still stumped for what to play, Headin' for the Christmas Ball (available on CD or Vinyl) has a great assortment of swing and R&B Christmas classics that can't be beat, and the name alone is perfect for the theme this year.


I hope we've inspired you to plan your own party with a new and fun theme this year.

The Harris Sisters (and our BIG family) send you warmest holiday wishes and hopes for a very Merry Christmas from our family to yours!


Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Crockpot BBQ Sriracha Meatballs

If you have a potluck or a party coming up, and you're in need of an easy appetizer recipe, look no further than this crockpot BBQ meatball recipe. With just four ingredients (many of which you may already have in your pantry), this recipe will come together in no time at all.

These marinated meatballs have just a bit of a kick from Sriracha sauce but the secret ingredient is grape jelly!



Crockpot BBQ Sriracha Meatballs

28 oz. fully cooked frozen meatballs

18 oz. bottle of BBQ sauce 

½ cup grape jelly

1 Tbsp. Sriracha

Chopped green onions or chives for garnish (optional)

  1. Add frozen meatballs to a slow cooker.
  2. Pour remaining ingredients on top of meatballs and stir until evenly coated.
  3. Cook on high for 2 hours or low for 3-4 hours, or until meatballs are heated through.
  4. Turn the slow cooker to warm until ready to serve.
  5. When ready to serve, garnish with chopped green onions or chives if desired.

Other Favorite Appetizer Recipes to Try

Round out your party table with these tried and true Harris Sisters' recipes:


Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Orange Balls

The Harris Sisters used to make this no-bake candy recipe at Christmas time growing up. With it's distinct orange and coconut flavors, it makes a great addition to your holiday treat table and with just 7 ingredients, this old-fashioned recipe is easy to make.


Orange Balls

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, at room temperature

16 oz confectioner's sugar

1/2 cup granulated sugar

12 oz vanilla wafers, finely crushed

14 oz bag sweetened flaked coconut, divided

6 oz frozen orange juice concentrate, thawed

1 cup chopped nuts


  1. Cream together butter and sugars.
  2. Add crushed vanilla wafers, half of coconut, and orange juice concentrate and mix together.
  3. Roll into 1 1/2 inch balls.
  4. Roll balls into the remaining coconut and place on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper.
  5. Chill in refrigerator until firm. 
  6. Store orange balls in refrigerator in an airtight container until ready to serve.


Notes:

Recipe makes about 60 orange balls.

Remember to keep orange balls chilled in the refrigerator until you are ready to serve them. Only serve the number of orange balls you need at first, then replenish your serving platter throughout the party as the first ones get eaten.


Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Grandma's Bread Stuffing (Dressing)

Growing up in the South, we have ALWAYS called our Thanksgiving side dish dressing. We have also always made it in a casserole dish never actually stuffed in the turkey itself. That's why we called it dressing instead of stuffing (because there was no stuffing involved). 

This is the recipe that we used growing up. It's a little different from most Southern recipes in that it doesn't use cornbread as the base, but bread crumbs.



Grandma's Bread Dressing (Stuffing)

4 stalks celery, diced

1 large onion, diced

10 cups crumbled, dried bread (or 2 (12 oz) packages herb seasoned stuffing mix like Pepperidge Farm)*

4 eggs, beaten

2 sticks of butter, divided and melted

4-6 cups broth*

1/4 teaspoon pepper, or to taste

2 teaspoons poultry seasoning, or to taste

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter or spray a 9 x 13 baking dish. Set aside.
  2. Saute the onions and celery in a small amount of butter in a pan for a few minutes until onions become transparent. Stir in the pepper and poultry seasoning. Remove from heat and set aside to cool slightly.
  3. Place the crumbled bread or stuffing mix in a large bowl, add the onion and celery mixture and remaining melted butter. Stir and pour two cups of the broth over top. Mix well. Taste and adjust the seasonings. (It should taste like what you want your finished dressing to taste like at this point.)
  4. Add the beaten eggs and mix well. Now you can change the consistency to your preference. If you prefer a wetter dressing, add more broth as needed to reach desired consistency. If you want a fluffy dressing you won’t add as much broth. 
  5. Lightly spoon mixture into the prepared casserole dish, but do not pack.
  6. Bake at 350 degrees F for 35 to 45 minutes. 
    • For a moister stuffing, baked your dish covered with aluminum foil. 
    • For a drier stuffing with a crunchy top, bake uncovered.



Notes:

We use veggie broth to make this a vegetarian recipe, but Grandma's original recipe called for chicken broth. The amounts for the broth are approximate based on the desired moisture level of the final product.

Remember that broth includes salt, which is why the recipe does not include additional salt. Also, poultry seasoning includes pepper (among other herbs), which is why there is noticeably less pepper in the recipe. Make sure to take this into consideration when adjusting your seasonings in step 3.

I usually use actual bread, dried and crumbled for this recipe. I tear dried pieces of bread into small pieces and fill up a gallon-sized Ziploc bag that I store in the freezer. Once the bag is full, I have enough for the recipe. It depends on how small you tear your bread pieces as to how many cups you will end up with in a full gallon-sized Ziploc bag, but you will usually end up with around 10.

If you would like to season your bread crumbs as you go along, you can add your own mix of spices, such as garlic, onion powder, parsley, etc., to the bread crumbs in the Ziploc bag. Make sure to shake the bag to incorporate the spices into the bread crumbs.

If you opt to use 2 (12 oz.) packages of Pepperidge Farm herb seasoned stuffing mix, keep in mind that these are measured by weight (ounces) not volume (cups). Each package will contain between 5-6 cups.

Make Ahead: 

Save time on Thanksgiving day! You can assemble the dressing in the baking dish, then wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate it for up to 24 hours before baking. To bake, let the dressing stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. Remove the plastic wrap and proceed with step 6.


Here's a look at the old-fashioned Southern dressing served up alongside some other Harris Sisters Thanksgiving side dish favorites:



Friday, October 25, 2024

Thrifted Halloween Painting Trend: Upcycling an Old Painting into Halloween Art

With Halloween right around the corner, I thought I would share a recent project that I've been working on.  The thrifted Halloween painting trend hit the scene hard last year.  The idea is to head to your local thrift store and find an old painting that you can upcycle into Halloween art.  I saw a lot of people doing this last year by adding subtle ghosts to landscape paintings and they all turned out so well.  It has taken me a year to get around to it, but I'm glad I finally jumped on board.  It was a fun project to complete. And while my results are definitely less subtle than a few ghosts scattered into a landscape, they are also most definitely Halloween-esque.  Let me show you. 

So I headed to my local Goodwill over the summer and snagged two canvases, both were by the same artist and they were both folk art. I saw the smaller canvas first and immediately knew exactly how I could turn it into Halloween art.  Then I spied a similar larger canvas, and I became convinced that it was meant to be.  I grabbed both pieces and headed to the checkout.  Honestly, both pieces of art have sat in storage for months, but I recently remembered them and pulled them out.  After a little debating, I decided to start on the larger piece first.  

This is what the canvas looked like when I began.  Nothing in particular about this canvas screamed Halloween.  On the contrary, it is a very traditional folk art, with lots of barns and houses, little Amish people, and horses pulling wagons.  But in the back of my mind, I knew what it could become. 


And here are some of the details from the original art. 

Notice the bright orange sun and yellow sky.  I knew that would have to be the first thing I changed. 


I also immediately knew that I would have to adjust all the bright white picket fencing.  


Notice too all those quilt squares painted on the buildings and barns.  I knew I would have to come up with a plan to change those as well. 


But it was all the little people scattered around this painting that excited me.  I adored this little lady hanging out her quilts, and the mom and daughter to her right.   I had a pretty immediate idea of how I would use all these people in a Halloween painting.  And I'll bet you are thinking the same thing. 


But my first order of business was to get the basic color scheme corrected.  I chose a dark blue for the sky and made that sun into a much bigger yellow moon. Then I adjusted all of the trees and bushes to reds, oranges, and yellows to replace all the bright green that we started with.  I also made all of the previously white picket fencing black.  


With those basic changes completed, I was finally able to move on to the fun part- converting all those little people into my Halloween cast of characters.  

The very first character I started on was the little fellow on the bicycle in the center of the painting.  I took one look at him and decided he HAD to become the Wicked Witch from the Wizard of Oz.   And with a few easy updates, he did.  

Here's the before and after. 


Since the bicycle already had a basket, it only made sense to add little Toto in there as well.  But this was only just the start.  


Next up was the little character on a tricycle.  I thought to myself, what character would be riding a tricycle?  And I knew it had to be a clown.  Here's that transformation. 




Then the inspiration struck for my favorite little lady hanging out the laundry on the line.  I thought I could make her into the main Sanderson Sister, Winifred, and naturally the little socks hanging on the laundry line turned into witch's stockings.  I covered all the quilts in white until I could come up with an idea.  The white actually sparked the idea that two of them could be plain white sheets/ ghosts and then I just turned the last one into a Halloween colored quilt with a few random patches.  I couldn't leave this little scene without coming up with a costume for the dog, so I made him into a pumpkin. 


Then I remembered the two ladies behind my little clown who were folding a quilt.  And I thought they should be the other two Sanderson siters, Sarah and Mary.  And I just turned their quilt into a sign that reads Hocus Pocus. So now all of the Sanderson Sisters are present and accounted for. 


Longtime blog followers may remember that The Harris Sisters paid homage to the Sanderson Sisters a few years ago.  



And it just kind of snowballed them there.  I incorporated all sorts of Halloween characters and costumes, some of which are specific to costumes that my little family has worn over the years.  Others are nods to some of the Harris Sisters' costumed endeavors, while others are just easily recognizable Halloween characters.   The biggest challenge was finding costumed characters recognizable enough that you would still be able to recognize in miniature form.  This is a large canvas but there is A LOT of subject matter in it, making each individual character around 2 inches tall if they are in the forefront, and closer to only an inch tall (or less) for those in the background. 

Here is a look at some of my favorite Halloween characters from the scene.

This little guy raising the flag in the forefront of the scene became Fred Flintstone. 


This was a nod to the year my family dressed as the Flintstones, which incidentally turned out to be the coldest Halloween on record.  We froze ourselves, but we looked good for this one photo.  


I turned a couple of tiny little characters into Woody and Jessie from Toy Story. 


This was a throwback to our Toy Story Era, when we dressed as Andy's famous toys back in 2018.


And remember that sweet mother and child?  I turned them into Snow White and a bunny, two things that may not seemingly go together. 


But there was, in fact, one Halloween I dressed up as Snow White. 



And Lexi wanted to be a rabbit. 


And these may win the prize for some of the smallest characters in this painting.  There was actually nothing in this space originally, but I wanted to include Raggedy Ann and Andy so I added them in this space. 


Of course, this was a nod to the year that Lexi and I dressed as those famous rag dolls all the way back in 2016. 


I turned this little guy into Harry Potter.



Our family has dressed as characters from Harry Potter for the last two years in a row.  Here is Lexi as Hedwig, Harry Potter's snow owl, from two years ago. 


And as the zany but loveable Luna Lovegood last year. 


I decided to turn a couple more characters into Dorothy and the Scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz to tie into the Wicked Witch I had already incorporated. 



And you may remember that The Harris Sisters all dressed as Dorothy a few years ago when we made our own trip down the yellow brick road


And I could not call this a Halloween transformation without adding my all time favorite Halloween characters, the Peanuts gang.  Did you notice the little boy and girl flying kites in the original painting?



They became Charlie Brown in his ghost costume (I had a little trouble with the scissors) and Lucy in her witch costume.  The kids with the kites were originally running in the church yard.  I felt like this area was screaming for a graveyard so I also added one and a few ghosts too. 



As for the kites themselves, I could not rest until I incorporated Snoopy flying on his doghouse.  So he became a kite, pulling a sign saying "Welcome Great Pumpkin".   And if you look closely, you will find Linus heading to the pumpkin patch on the left with his blanket.  That little detail was my daughter's idea. 


So this project really took on a life of it's own.  I worked here and there on all the little details over the course of about a month transforming all the little houses, people, and animals into their own sweet Halloweentown.  I added lots of pumpkins, candles, ghosts, lights, and signs throughout the scene to make the transformation complete.  Here is a look at the final finished painting. 


And here is a final look at how it all started. 


This was such a fun project and I would absolutely recommend.  But if you are a little hesitant to give it a go, I would definitely say don't start out as ambitious as I did.  Maybe working a few ghosts into a landscape is probably the better place to start.  And this trend doesn't have to just start and end with Halloween.  It might be fun to do something similar for other holidays or seasons.  In any case, next time you pass your local thrift store, I hope you will take a peek at the thrifted art and see what calls to you.  

You Might Also Be Interested In