Crime Doesn’t Pay?

We recently were involved in an interesting and funny story involving impetuous youth, citizen aided law enforcement, sweet (and tough) victims and perpetrators who “fessed up”.

We had a call from a nice  young man who said he is treasurer for a college fraternity in the Midwest. He wanted to purchase one of our lighted outdoor decorations and have it shipped to a lady in the same town as the college. He referred to the need to replace a lighted decoration that had been damaged by some of the members of his fraternity. He arranged payment and asked for shipping confirmation, which we always provide.

The next day, I had a call from the lady with the damaged Christmas decoration, who gave me the rest of the story. It seems that her decoration was one of several that were stolen in this town before last Christmas. She was upset and prayed for the return of her piece. In the meantime a neighbor, walking their dog late at night, noted the license number of a suspicious car, which was traced back to the college fraternity.

Two boys at the fraternity admitted to stealing a number for Christmas decorations and the fraternity offered to replace any damaged pieces. The boys were charged with a class C felony and will be disciplined by the fraternity ethics council. The nice lady says she feels sorry for them.

The lady’s husband was unable to repair the returned decoration so the fraternity is purchasing a more expensive piece from us to replace it. Finally, the nice lady  said that her church needs a new Nativity Set. Since she is on the committee and now knows about us, our website and our selection of Lighted Nativity Sets,  she will likely buy one from us.

Our thanks to the fraternity!

New Items and Ideas for 2011

We are very excited about our planned new items and sets. We have been able to add two new pieces to our beautiful and popular Christmas Nativity and Christmas Nativity with Stable. These new pieces will be a Christmas Shepherd with Lamb and a Little Lamb. Because of a manufacturers cost increase and the two new figures, the price of the sets will increase.

To add to and improve the beauty and functionality of our very popular Life Size Nativity 54″, we have replaced the original Ox and Donkey with larger and more detailed figures. The Life Size Black Nativity which was well received last year, has been improved by the addition of a Shepherd Boy and the new larger Ox and Donkey. As with many of our imported items, factory cost increases and much higher cost for container shipping across the Pacific  have resulted in price increase for these items and others on our website.

The success of our 2010 trial of indoor resin and fabric Nativity figures has prompted us to add a 42in shepherd to the Nativity Pure Charm and Animal set. In addition we will be adding a number of new Nativity, Angel and Christmas figures from the designer Mark Roberts.

More in our next blog.

“Good News for our Area”

What a pleasure it is to chat with our wonderful customers! We were talking recently with a woman pastor for a church in the north of Iowa just by the Minnesota border and not far off Interstate 35 which runs from Canada to Mexico, right through the middle of the country. Despite this proximity, the trucking company we use to make our deliveries only goes there once a week and charges a $100 “beyond charge” to do so.

The local ministerial  association in this community was looking to purchase a large outdoor Nativity scene for the local courthouse lawn to replace an “old, worn out, small, 2D plywood set”. They had a total of 64 square feet in which to set up their display. They were concerned about durability in their harsh winters and of course, the total price, including truck freight charges.

We gave them five options ranging in size from 35 inches to over 60 inches and prices from $1549.00 to $9999.00 plus shipping. When they placed their order, they purchased a 30″ Holy Family for $449.00 plus shipping of  219.66. I spoke to the pastor to be sure that was what they needed and she said that given the rough time the area has had during our “Great Recession” even this small new Holy Family represented  “great news” for her town and the churches which had banded together. A local craftsman will build a stable to contain the set and they planned to add to the Nativity in future years

Her positive outlook and optimism is infectious and I hope it spreads.

Our Great Customers

In an earlier post I said that the season had started. Well, as of September 1, it has really taken off! One of the fun things about offering both religious and secular figures for Christmas celebration is the great variety of people and organizations we deal with.

Recently, I spoke with and we subsequently received an order form Boys Town in Boys Town, Nebraska. Well the name sounded interesting, so I googled it. The full name of the institution is Father Flanagan’s Boys Home in Boys Town Nebraska. This was originally established in 1917 by Father Edward Flanagan as home for orphaned and abandoned boys. Today, Boys town directly cares for over 27,000 boys and girls annually in 14 states and the District of Columbia. Boys Town programs include education, residential homes emergency shelters, foster care, family counseling and a medical research hospital. At the 900 acre home campus in Boys Town,  Nebraska 550 girls and boys in grades 3-12 live and attend school.

Father Flanagan and Boys Town became internationally famous as a result of the 1938 movie Boys Town for which the star, Spencer Tracy, won the Academy Award and a second Academy Award Statue was created and given to Father Flanagan at the suggestion of the movie star. For a concise story of Boys Town and the good they do, please see the Mackinac Article

Another Story from Brian “Fox” Ellis

We are very please to be able to offer you another story from the incomparable raconteur and storyteller Brian “Fox” Ellis of Fox Tales International
Dancing Toy Soldiers, Wrestling Ballerinas and A Nutcracker

The ballet company’s annual production of “The Nutcracker” is a ritual for many families with young children. Every little girl dreams of dancing with the sugar plum fairy. It is the one time a year when everyone and their mother dresses up for a night at the ballet. Everyone wants to see their niece, granddaughter, or little sister in their glorious moment.

My daughter danced as one of the little mice who fought the toy soldiers in a ferocious mock battle. The choreography was thrilling. The audience gasped, held their breaths and let out a palpable sigh when things turned south for the mouse king. In graceful pirouettes the mice wrestled the toy soldiers and everyone applauded. My daughter crowned the Nutcracker with her sword and sent him reeling. Everyone laughed, except the Nutcracker.

For one night we can imagine a cornucopia of candied confections twirling and leaping, exotic treats prancing and dancing on stage. The whole production takes the Victorian idea of ‘visions of sugar plums danced in their head’ to a sweeter level of fancy.

The nutcracker is the prized toy, gallant in his uniform, firm in his self confidence, and the one who cracks the hardest shells so you can get at the goodness inside. He leads an army of toy soldiers to protect the confections from the wicked mice.

At the cast party after the show my daughter won a door prize, a three foot tall nutcracker, nearly as tall as she was! She beamed as she struggled to take it out to the car after the late night wound down. I placed it on the hearth of our fire place, next to the Christmas tree, next to the little table where we would place Santa’s cookies. We all went to bed.

When I woke up the next morning, the Nutcracker had moved. It was over near the back door. The doggy door looked askew. I peered through the frosty glass. There were a wide variety of fresh tracks in the new fallen snow, tracks large and small, some like feet, or should I say boots, and others looked like paws, mostly little tiny paws, but one set was huge. There were also more than a few indistinct wet footprints inside on the rug.

Did the mouse king track down the Nutcracker for round two? Did the Nutcracker beat back another attack on the sweetest confections and exotic treats? What happened last night as visions of sugarplums danced in our heads?

As I placed the Nutcracker back over by the fire place he looked a little disheveled, but there was a hint of a smile painted on his stern face I had not noticed before. As I turned to walk into the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, I thought I heard that song, that unforgettable melody of Tchaikovsky’s most famous waltz whistling in my head. I turned to see where it was coming from. Just then a gust of wind lifted the doggy door. A flurry of snow blew in on the rug, wiping clean the footprints inside and out. This could not all be in my head, but now there was no proof. No one would believe me… it was only the wind I tried to convince myself, it was only the Tchaikovsky whistling wind…
Our Nutcracker still shows the faintest hint of a smile.

More On Religious Christmas Displays

My last post attracted a lot of comment. Most of the writers agreed with my position that religious Christmas displays by businesses, communities and institutions continue to grow. Like one of the writers, many of our creche customers, say that they are going back to what their parents or grandparents did, that is replace the Christmas tree with a Nativity Scene as a symbol of the celebration. The size and detail of the new Nativity Scenes make this an attractive decision.Even the folks who cannot bear to part with the tree are adding a Creche around the base.

I grew up in a time when Nativity Creche  were small, table top or mantle-piece figures and the outdoor Nativity display figures were the tacky lighted  blow-mold pieces that were more like cartoon figures than lifelike. In those days the few large life size Nativity Sets were made in Italy by Fontanini,  were limited to indoor use and were very expensive. Well,  Fontanini has now been in business for over 100 years and its Nativities are still very beautiful and very expensive. Like any exclusive product Fontanini  has generated lower price versions, made in the Orient and the Philippines. These Nativity figures are made of resin and resin/fabric combination  and their lower price and great availability as well as a much larger range of sets, has helped build the greater Christmas display of Nativities we see today.

Religious Christmas Displays

A recent article in a Christmas trade magazine had the following quote by a professional Christmas decorator, whose company designs and installs large scale Christmas displays for hospitals, banks and municipalities. He said “religious themes are pretty much out for public displays, unless paid for and sponsored by private funds” Then he remembered two major shopping centers in southern Florida who displayed the full Christmas Creche within the mall. “I had not seen that in a long time”, he mused.

What an interesting comment and, like a lot of life, there is more to the story. Our website features large outdoor Nativity sets and Creche. Every year we sell more large sets to municipalities and public institutions as well as nursing homes, hospitals, banks, manufacturing companies and yes, shopping centers. The two sets referred to by the decorator were sold by us as a result of missionary work by our customer who convinced the mall management that they were well within their rights to display this Christian religious  symbol. We have had customers who purchased Nativity sets to donate to their local municipality only to have the council get cold feet regarding the supreme court ruling  and have to be convinced by a constitutional  lawyer that they were not breaking the law. Please see the note on our website under “Useful Information” entitled “Your Legal Right to Display a Nativity Scene”

A New Story from Brian “Fox” Ellis

We are thrilled to feature a new story from the famed storyteller Brian “Fox” Ellis from FoxTales International FoxTales We hope you enjoy it.

A SNOW MAN IN FLORIDA?

(Or, Why are snowmen part of the holiday celebration even in the south?)

“Mommy, Mommy, please tell us about the snow.”

“Please, please, please,” a chorus of swimsuit clad children were pleading with their mother as they took a break from swimming on this unusually warm, sunny day in December on Miami Beach.

“You see, I was born in New Jersey,” she began for the hundredth time, “and what I loved most about the winter was the snow, soft, deep and fluffy or the thick clouds of howling, blowing blizzards of snow, I just loved snow.”

“When will it snow here, mommy? Why don’t it snow here?” were Charlie’s constant questions.

His older sister Sarah answered, “cause it’s too warm here, the snow would melt, silly! Shush.”

Mother continued, “When I was a little girl, not much bigger than you, I remember school being cancelled because of the deep snow. I remember being so excited to spend the day playing in the snow with all of my friends!”

“We would all bundle up in layers and layers of clothes, long underwear, two or three shirts, a sweater, a jacket, a coat, mittens, boots and a hat. We wore so many clothes it was hard to walk. We would all meet at the park down the street. My brothers would go off with the older boys and build a big fort for a rowdy, wet and cold snow ball fight.

“One of the older girls would line us all up and make sure we all stepped in the same footsteps, so 30 kids left only one set of tracks. When she gave the signal, we would all fall down on our backside and move our arms and legs just so… this was not just any old snow angel, no way, by working together we could make a whole choir of angels, a heavenly host singing hallelujah!”

“But my favorite part of winter was making a snow man. When all of us kids worked together, the bigger kids making humongous snowballs, the middle sized kids making medium sized snowballs and the little kids making heads, we could make a whole family of snowmen, snow women and once we even tried to carve a snow dog!”

The kids laughed. The mother was lost in moment of nostalgia, remembering those warm feelings on that coldest of days.

The kids ran off towards the surf. As the youngest boy lay down, he moved his arms and legs just so, making a sand angel. Mother smiled. An idea flashed across her imagination.

On the way home she bought a bag of ice. While the kids were showering and changing, she shaved the ice in the icy maker, forming it into large and smaller snowballs. By the time the kids came back down stairs, there was an entire family of snowmen, snowwomen and even a snow dog sitting in bowls on the kitchen table. The kids laughed and clapped as mother coated them in flavored syrup and everyone ate their own icy snow man.

The oldest daughter Sarah had the biggest Cheshire grin, but said nothing. She knew what lay under the tree wrapped in glittery ribbons and bows.

On Christmas morning, when mother opened her present and first saw a picture of herself as a little girl bundled up in many layers, standing next to a giant family of snowmen, she had a puzzled look on her face. She folded back the tissue paper and saw a beautiful glittering snow man and her heart melted.

“Momma, I got you a snowman that will never melt!”

How many Christmases had passed since that first snowman?

“And so you see, that is why we have snowmen for Christmas, even in the south. That momma, that was your grandmother; that boy, Charlie, was your Uncle Chuck; and that older sister, Sarah, that was me. My grandma sent me the picture of my mother from her snowy childhood in New Jersey.”

As the children sat quietly, snuggling with their mother, they knew they had seen beautiful crystal snowmen, wooden carved snowmen, even plastic snowmen that danced and sang with brightly colored lights, but they had never seen a real snowman.

Their eyes were drawn to the shelf in the corner above the Christmas tree, loaded down with snowmen of all sizes. There were tall snowmen standing under the tree, and several snowmen hung as ornaments upon the tree. The children now knew why their mother loved them so, and wondered, because of the snowmen they had seen at their friends’ houses, how many of their friends longed for the cold bite of snow upon their cheeks.

Dedicated to Trisha Shabet, whose grandchildren still make snowmen for her every winter!

© Brian “Fox” Ellis – www.foxtalesint.com

A New Story from Brian “Fox” Ellis

From time to time we are honored with a Christmas related story from the famous raconteur and children  story teller Brian “Fox” Ellis of Fox Tales International. Brian has taken time out from his busy schedule of movie making, musical theatre  production and live performances to write several of his intriguing and entertaining stories for us. The first one is entitled:

Dancing Toy Soldiers, Wrestling Ballerinas and A Nutcracker

The ballet company’s annual production of “The Nutcracker” is a ritual for many families with young children. Every little girl dreams of dancing with the sugar plum fairy. It is the one time a year when everyone and their mother dresses up for a night at the ballet. Everyone wants to see their niece, granddaughter, or little sister in their glorious moment.

My daughter danced as one of the little mice who fought the toy soldiers in a ferocious mock battle. The choreography was thrilling. The audience gasped, held their breaths and let out a palpable sigh when things turned south for the mouse king. In graceful pirouettes the mice wrestled the toy soldiers and everyone applauded. My daughter crowned the Nutcracker with her sword and sent him reeling. Everyone laughed, except the Nutcracker.

For one night we can imagine a cornucopia of candied confections twirling and leaping, exotic treats prancing and dancing on stage. The whole production takes the Victorian idea of ‘visions of sugar plums danced in their head’ to a sweeter level of fancy.

The nutcracker is the prized toy, gallant in his uniform, firm in his self confidence, and the one who cracks the hardest shells so you can get at the goodness inside. He leads an army of toy soldiers to protect the confections from the wicked mice.

At the cast party after the show my daughter won a door prize, a three foot tall nutcracker, nearly as tall as she was! She beamed as she struggled to take it out to the car after the late night wound down. I placed it on the hearth of our fire place, next to the Christmas tree, next to the little table where we would place Santa’s cookies. We all went to bed.

When I woke up the next morning, the Nutcracker had moved. It was over near the back door. The doggy door looked askew. I peered through the frosty glass. There were a wide variety of fresh tracks in the new fallen snow, tracks large and small, some like feet, or should I say boots, and others looked like paws, mostly little tiny paws, but one set was huge. There were also more than a few indistinct wet footprints inside on the rug.

Did the mouse king track down the Nutcracker for round two? Did the Nutcracker beat back another attack on the sweetest confections and exotic treats? What happened last night as visions of sugarplums danced in our heads?

As I placed the Nutcracker back over by the fire place he looked a little disheveled, but there was a hint of a smile painted on his stern face I had not noticed before. As I turned to walk into the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, I thought I heard that song, that unforgettable melody of Tchaikovsky’s most famous waltz whistling in my head. I turned to see where it was coming from. Just then a gust of wind lifted the doggy door. A flurry of snow blew in on the rug, wiping clean the footprints inside and out. This could not all be in my head, but now there was no proof. No one would believe me… it was only the wind I tried to convince myself, it was only the of a smile Tchaikovsky whistling wind…

Our Nutcracker still shows the faintest hint of a smile.

Trends in Outdoor Christmas Decorating

This is the time of year when we get very busy. Right now, we are answering many quote requests from commercial Christmas decorators and installers. Maybe it’s the economy, but it seems to me that there is less large out door Christmas product available, while demand has only declined a little. Our new “Larger than Life Size Nativity” set is about to sell out and we have already sold out of many versions of Toy Soldier and Nutcracker. With typhoons and tropical storms in the Pacific, timely replenishment for these figures is pretty much ruled out.

One really interesting development from a supplier is the substitution of LED bulbs for incandescent on consumer Christmas Light displays. The LED bulbs have been offered as an alternative on commercial Christmas Light Displays for a few years now. They offer a quite different look, less heat and energy use and long life compared to the incandescent light. The lighting in our homes is changing, why shouldn’t our Christmas decorations?

We are certainly seeing the impact of job losses and the reduced economy on Church giving. Many of our Nativity sets are purchased by church congregations, usually led by a parishioner who provides the leadership and often the lion’s share of the money needed to purchase the set. This year, the process is more democratic and more people are participating but it is more difficult to get people to provide money, not a surprise.