Showing posts with label Christmas savings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas savings. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

A Handmade Holiday Open House December 4, 2010







A Handmade Holiday Open House
(this link has photos of many of the items for sale)

Saturday, December, 4, 2010
2:00 - 6:00 p.m.


[This event has now ended but you can buy items from the vendors by clicking on the links below.)


Some friends of mine are hosting a holiday gathering in early December. This will be an open house featuring several vendors of handmade gift items for your holiday shopping.  

Included are:


I know Stephanie and Amy personally and have seen some of their beautiful cakes and handsewn items respectively.  Sarah is Stephanie's sister and has about 200 items for sale  at Etsy.com.  Click on the links above to see some items they have made.   You will be delighted at their offerings as well as the others included.  Everyone, women and girls especially, love handmade gifts, so if you do not have the time or skills to craft something special, come join them at this Open House.

Here is THE LINK to the public event on Facebook with more details.  Feel free to bring your friends if you are in the Orlando / Altamonte Springs area at that time.  I'm sure you'll find some lovely gifts.


Friday, September 24, 2010

93 Days Until Christmas! Setting Aside $$ for Holiday Shopping




UPDATE July 1, 2011
After July 1 at our home, we always say "it's almost Christmas" because there is only one more month of summer break, school begins, holidays resume, a few family birthdays...    Time really flies!  Start saving a little bit each week starting NOW and you won't have to stress out about your January credit card bill for the holidays.  Perhaps this year you can be more generous to others by just planning ahead a bit.
  • $5 for   26 weeks =  $ 130
  • $10 for 26 weeks =  $260
  • $15 for 26 weeks =  $390
  • $20 for 26 weeks =  $520
  • $25 for 26 weeks =  $650
  • $50 for 26 weeks =  $1,300

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Original Post:

93 Days until Christmas!

Although we just celebrated the first day of Fall on Wednesday, Christmas is just around the corner!

Prior to Christmas, we have three family birthdays, then two more right after Christmas.  If you haven't already started, it's not too early to begin shopping for Christmas or at least setting aside $$ each week for holiday spending.  Most people do not include GIFTS as one of their budget items even though it is almost always a large expense during the year, but it really helps avoid the credit card shock in January to have done so.  It's good for the national economy to spend a lot during this time, but more importantly, your/my personal economy needs to stay in order.

I have been budgeting for holiday spending for quite a few years and although I can't control my husband's gift spending, I can at least control my own and estimate what his might be (he's sometimes more generous than I am at Christmas time, but has learned to shop the sales).  :)  :)  Stress from over-spending can be  a nightmare.

Let me show you how the money adds up little by little.  

Although most spending is done before Christmas, if you set aside money each week  from now until December 25, you'll have saved:
  • $5 for   13 weeks =  $  65
  • $10 for 13 weeks =  $130
  • $15 for 13 weeks =  $195
  • $20 for 13 weeks =  $260
  • $25 for 13 weeks =  $325
  • $50 for 13 weeks =  $650

Even if you spend more than this, this $$ stash will still put a healthy dent in any holiday spending that you do.  Keep track of how much you set aside each week on an index card like the one on the right.  Deduct it right away from your checkbook (so you won't spend it on something else) and/or put the cash in an envelope (best idea) or in a separate savings account.  Use the money solely for your Christmas shopping.  Last year, I just cashed a few checks for the whole amount I had set aside and then deposited it when the credit card bill arrived. 


BOTTOM LINE:  When it's gone, that's all you spend.  It takes discipline meaning often giving up something else to set a little more aside but so worth it later.

Other ways to gather funds or to  save some extra holiday $$:
  • Sell items on Ebay, Amazon or a yard sale
  • Part-time job for a few weeks
  • Sell books at BrightLight Books (a local store here that takes them)
  • Talk with relatives and agree to limit spending to a certain amount per family OR to just buy gifts for the kids in each family [We typically buy a small family gift for the adults--Christmas ornament, candles, holiday decor, gift card-- and then gifts for the children.]
  • Draw names in your family or group that usually exchanges gifts AND set a $$ limit
  • Have a family outing or special dinner together instead of buying gifts for each other
  • Give service coupons to each other to be used over the next few months 
  • Shop at thrift stores and yard sales, looking for new, unopened items
  • READ the sales flyers in the newspaper and/or shop online for the best bargains
  • Use your coupons when selecting gifts
  • Give gift cards and set a low limit for each, i.e. no more than $10-$20
  • Decide as a family to give a specific amount to a charity and then give each other ONE gift each
  • Give one gift on Christmas Day plus a set amount of $$.  Go shopping together with the family the morning AFTER Christmas and then have lunch out together. [Some friends of ours did this last year and really enjoyed it.]
  • Keep a list of whom you intend to buy for, with your $$ limits and keep track of your spending
  • Make your gifts to keep the costs down--food items are great (I baked a loaf a day last year and gave it to all our neighbors and local relatives), sewing, artwork, greeting cards...be resourceful and creative.
  • Give at least one gift to someone that you know will be totally unreciprocated just for the act of giving.  Sometimes you have to do this on Christmas Day so you don't get "pay backs".   

I've already begun setting aside money for Christmas and always feel so free when shopping by doing this.  Don't delay.  Start this week.  You'll be glad you did.




    Tuesday, August 4, 2009

    FINANCES: Christmas Gift Giving


    Go to the ant, O sluggard,
    Observe her ways and be wise,
    Which, having no chief,
    Officer or ruler,
    Prepares her food in the summer
    And gathers her provision in the harvest.
    Proverbs 6: 6-8

    Christmas conversation in August? Christmas is about 20 weeks away. Are you beginning to save for it? or already shopping in advance for it? Many people go into debt in the extreme for Christmas gifts. We purchase a fair amount of gifts for our immediate family, one grandparent (the others are deceased), my nephews and their kids, and a few friends. For friends and extended family, I keep a drawer of gifts stocked from thrift store shopping, yard sale-ing, and good sales that I see. Bed Bath and Beyond is one of my favorite gift stores due to their 20% or $5 off coupons. I purchase items new with tags generally for this (also for birthdays). I personally love homemade gifts since time is more precious than cash to me. As I have time I may make note cards or other small gifts or buy flowers in bulk and arrange in inexpensive vases. I set aside a portion of my part-time business income (piano lessons and eBay sales) for Christmas gifts as well. Let's face it, as children get older, the things they need are sometimes more expensive.

    Our wrapping paper, tissue and cards were purchased last year after Christmas and I have limited the number that I send, primarily just to relatives now. The number we had been sending was getting out of hand and with postage now at 43 cents an envelope...it was creeping into our budget.

    I encourage our sons to give away things they no longer use to make room for new things and also to do some eBay sales themselves to earn money for the gifts they want to purchase. The older one has a job and the younger one can do outside chores for cash as well.

    A little math if you save a little each week from now until Christmas:
    • $5 / week = $100
    • $10 / week = $200
    • $15 / week = $300
    • $20 / week = $400
    It adds up quickly and can help avoid the January depression when the credit card bill comes in. Commit to do this today and you'll be pretty much stress free when shopping time comes around.

    RECIPE: Kale Soup

     Kale comes in such large packages. I don't really like it as well raw as cooked and  I had a LOT to use up. Found this recipe for kale ...